Arkady and Boris Strugatsky. Roadside Picnic
© Arkady and Boris Strugatsky
© Translated from Russian by Antonina W. Bouis
© MacMillan Publishing Co., Inc, New York
4. REDRICK SCHUHART, AGE 31
The valley had cooled overnight, and by dawn it was actually cold. They
were walking along the embankment, stepping over the rotten ties between the
rusty rails, and Redrick watched the drops of condensed fog glisten on
Arthur Burbridge's leather jacket. The boy was striding along lightly and
merrily, as though the exhausting night, the nervous tension that still made
every vein in his body ache, and the two horrible hours they spent huddled
back to back for warmth in a tortured half-sleep on top of the hill, waiting
for the flood of the green stuff to drip past them and disappear into the
ravine--as though all that had not happened.
A thick fog lay along the sides of the embankment. Once in a while it
crawled up on the rails with its heavy gray feet and in those places they
walked knee-deep in the swirling mists. The air smelled of rust, and the
swamp to the right of the embankment reeked of decay. The fog made it
impossible to see anything, but Redrick knew that a hilly plain with rubble
heaps surrounded them, and that mountains hid in the gloom beyond. And he
knew also that when the sun came up and the fog settled into dew, he would
see the downed helicopter some where on his left and the ore flatcars up
ahead. And then the real work would begin.
Redrick slipped his hand up under the backpack to lift it so that the
edge of the helium tank would not dig into his spine. It's a heavy bugger,
he thought. How am I going to crawl with it? A mile on all fours. All right,
stalker, no grumbling now, you knew what you were getting into. Five hundred
thousand at the end of the road. I can work up a sweat for that. Five
hundred thousand sure is a sweet bundle. I'll be damned if I give it to them
for less. Or if I give Buzzard more than thirty. And the punk? The punk gets
nothing. If the old bugger had told even half the truth, the punk gets
nothing.
He looked at Arthur's back again and watched through squinted eyes as
the boy stepped over two ties at a time, broad-shouldered, narrow-hipped.
His dark raven hair, like his sister's, bounced rhythmically. He asked for
it, Redrick thought grimly. Himself. Why did he beg to come along so
persistently! So desperately! He trembled and had tears in his eyes. "Take
me, Mr. Schuhart! Lots of people have offered to take me along, but they're
all no good! My father ... but he can't take me now!" Redrick forced himself
to drop the memory. He was repelled by the thought and maybe that's why he
started thinking about Arthur's sister. He just could not fathom it: how
such a fantastic-looking woman could actually be a plastic fake, a dummy. It
was like the buttons on his mother's blouse--they were amber, he remembered,
semitransparent, and golden. He just wanted to shove them in his mouth and
suck on them, and every time he was disappointed terribly, and every time he
forgot about the disappointment --not forgot, just refused to accept what
his memory told him.
Maybe it was his pop who sent him over to me, he thought about Arthur.
Look at the piece he's carrying in his back pocket. Nah, I doubt it. Buzzard
knows me. Buzzard knows that I don't go for jokes. And he knows what I'm
like in the Zone. No, that's all nonsense. He's not the first to have begged
me, and not the first to have shed tears; others even got down on their
knees. And as for the piece, they all bring guns on their first time in the
Zone. The first and last time. Is it really the last? It's your last, bud.
Here's how it works out, Buzzard: his last. Yes, if you knew what your sonny
boy was planning --you would have beaten him to a pulp with your crutches.
He suddenly felt that there was something ahead of them--not far, some
thirty or forty yards away.
"Stop," he told Arthur.
The boy obediently froze in his tracks. His reflexes were good-- he had
stopped with one foot in the air, and he lowered it slowly and carefully.
Redrick stopped next to him. The track dipped noticeably here and
disappeared completely in the fog. And there was something in the fog.
Something big and motionless. Harmless. Redrick care fully sniffed the air.
Yes. Harmless.
"Forward," he said quietly. He waited for Arthur to take a step and he
followed. Out of the corner of his eye he could see Arthur's face, his
chiseled profile, the clear skin of his cheek, and the determined set of his
lips under the thin mustache.
They were up to their waists in fog, and then up to their necks. A few
seconds later the great hulk of the ore cars loomed ahead of them.
"That's it," Redrick said and took off his backpack. "Sit down right
where you are. Smoke break."
Arthur helped him with the backpack, and they sat down next to each
other on the rusty rails. Redrick unbuttoned a flap and took out a package
with sandwiches and a thermos of coffee. While Arthur set up the sandwiches
on top of the backpack, Redrick took out his flask, opened it, closed his
eyes, and took several slow sips.
"Want some?" he offered, wiping the neck of the flask. "For courage?"
Arthur shook his head, hurt.
"I don't need that for courage, Mr. Schuhart. I'd rather have coffee,
if I may. It's awfully damp here, isn't it?"
"It's damp." He put away the flask, chose a sandwich, and set to
chewing. "When the fog lifts, you'll see that we're surrounded by nothing
but swamps. In the old days the mosquitoes were something fierce."
He shut up and poured himself some coffee It was hot, thick, and sweet,
and it was even nicer to drink now than alcohol. It smelled of home. Of
Guta. And not just of Guta, but of Guta in her robe, fresh from sleep, with
pillow marks still on her cheek. Why did I get mixed up in this, he thought?
Five hundred thousand. And what do I need it for? Planning to buy a bar with
it or something? You need money so you don't have to think about money.
That's the truth. Dick was right about that. You have a house, you have a
yard, you won't he without a job in Harmont. Buzzard trapped me, lured me
like a tenderfoot.
"Mr. Schuhart," Arthur suddenly said, looking away "Do you really
believe this thing grants wishes?"
"Nonsense!" Redrick muttered distractedly and froze over the cup near
his lips. "How do you know what we're after here?"
Arthur smiled in embarrassment, ran his fingers through his hair,
tugged at it, and spoke.
"Well, I guessed! I don't remember exactly what gave me the clue. Well,
first of all, Father was always going on and on about the Golden Ball, and
lately he's stopped. And he has been talking about you. And
know better than to believe Father about you being friends. And
secondly, he's been kind of strange lately." Arthur laughed and shook his
head, remembering something. "And finally, I figured it out, when you and he
tried out the little dirigible over in the lot." He smacked the backpack
that contained the tightly rolled balloon. "I followed you and when I saw
you lift the bag with rocks and guide it over the ground, it was all clear
to me. As far as I know, the Golden Ball is the only heavy thing left in the
Zone." He took a bite out of his sandwich and spoke dreamily with his mouth
full. "I just don't Understand how you plan to hook onto it, it's probably
smooth."
Redrick watched him over the rim of the cup and thought how unlike each
other they were, father and son. They had absolutely nothing in common. Not
face, or voice, or soul. Buzzard had a hoarse, whiny, sneaky kind of voice.
But when he talked about this, his voice was hearty. You couldn't ignore
him. "Red," he had said then, leaning over the table. "There are only two of
us left, and only two legs for both, and they're yours. Who else but you?
It's probably the most valuable thing in the Zone! And who should have it?
Should those wise guys with their machinery get it? Hah? I found it. Me! How
many of our boys fell there? But I found it! I was saving it for myself. And
I wouldn't be giving it to anyone now, but as you see, my arms have gotten
too short. There's nobody left but you. I dragged lots of young ones in
there, a school full. I opened a school for them, you see ... they can't.
They don't have the guts for it, or something. All right, you don't believe
me, I don't care. You want the money. You get it. You give me as much as you
want. I know you won't gyp me. And maybe I'll be able to get my legs back.
My legs, do you understand? The Zone took them away, and maybe it'll give
them back?"
"What?" Redrick asked, coming out of his reverie.
"I asked, do you mind if I smoke, Mr. Schuhart?"
"Sure. Go ahead and smoke. I'll have one too."
He gulped the rest of the coffee, pulled out a cigarette, and as he
squeezed it, he gazed into the thinning fog. A psyche, he thought He's nuts.
He wants his legs back, the bastard.
All this talk had left a residue, he was not sure of what. And it was
not dissolving with time, but on the contrary, it was accumulating. And he
could not understand what it was, but it was bothering him. It was as though
he had caught something from Buzzard, not some disgusting disease, but on
the contrary .. . his strength, perhaps? No, not strength. But what then?
All right, he told himself. Let's look at it this way: let's assume that I
didn't get this far. I was all ready to go, packed, and then something
happened, they arrested me, say. Would that be bad? Definitely. Why bad?
Because I would lose money? No, it has nothing to do with the money. That
this treasure will fall into the hands of Throaty and Bones? There's
something in that. It would hurt. But what do I care? In the end, they'll
get it all anyway.
"Brrrrrr." Arthur shivered. "It gets into your bones. Mr. Schuhart,
maybe now you'll give me a sip?"
Redrick got the flask silently. I didn't agree right away, he thought.
Twenty times I told Buzzard to get lost, and on the twenty-first I agreed,
after all. I couldn't take it any more. Our last conversation turned out to
be brief and businesslike. "Hi, Red. I brought the map. Maybe you'll take a
look at it, after all?" And I looked into his eyes, and they were like
sores--yellow with black dots--and I said "Let me have it." And that was it.
I remember that I was drunk then, I had been drinking all week, I felt
really low. Ah, the hell with it. Does it matter? I went. So here I am. Why
am I worrying about it? What am I, afraid?
He shuddered. He could hear a long sad sound through the fog. He jumped
up and Arthur jumped up too. But it was quiet again, and the only sound was
the gravel tumbling down the incline under their feet.
"Must be the ore settling," Arthur whispered unsurely, barely able to
get the words out. "The ore cars have a history--they've been here a long
time."
Redrick looked straight ahead and saw nothing. He remembered. It was at
night. He woke up from the same sound, sad and long, his heart stopping,
like in a dream. Only it hadn't been a dream. It was Monkey screaming in her
bed by the window. Guta woke up, too, and took Redrick's hand. He could feel
the sweat break out on her shoulder against his. They lay there and
listened, and when Monkey stopped crying and went back to sleep, he waited a
little longer, then got up, went down to the kitchen, and greedily drank a
half-bottle of cognac, That was the night he started drinking.
"It's the ore," Arthur said. "You know, it settled with time. The
dampness, erosion, all kinds of things like that."
Redrick looked at his pale face and sat down again. His cigarette had
disappeared somewhere from his fingers, and he lit another one. Arthur stood
a little longer, looking around anxiously, then he also sat down.
"I've heard that there's life in the Zone. People. Not visitors, but
people. It seems the Visitation caught them here, and they mutated ....
they've acclimated to the new conditions. Have you heard that, too, Mr.
Schuhart?"
"Yes," Redrick said. "But not here. In the mountains in the northwest.
Some shepherds.
That's what he's infected me with, he thought. His madness. That's why
I've come here. That's what I want here. A strange and very new feeling
overwhelmed him. He was aware that the feeling was really not new at all,
that it had been hidden in him for a long time, but that he was
acknowledging it only now, and everything was falling into place. And
everything that had seemed like nonsense and the delirious ravings of a
crazy old man turned out to be his only hope, the only meaning of his life.
Because he finally understood: the only thing he had left in the world, the
only thing he lived for in the last few months was the hope of a miracle.
Fool that he was, he kept pushing hope away, trampling on it, mocking it,
trying to drink it away, because that was the way he was used to living.
Since childhood he had relied on nothing but himself. And since childhood
this self-reliance had been measured in the amount of money he could snatch,
grab, or bite away from the indifferent chaos that surrounded him. It had
always been that way, and it would have continued, if he had not ended up in
a hole that no amount of money could get him out of and in which it was
absolutely useless to rely on himself. And now this hope--no longer a hope,
but confidence in a miracle --filled him to the brim, and he was amazed at
how he could have lived for so long in the impenetrable, exitless gloom. He
laughed and gave Arthur a poke in the shoulder.
"Well, stalker, think we'll live through this, eh?"
Arthur looked at him in surprise and smiled uncertainly. Redrick
crumpled up the waxed paper from the sandwiches, tossed it under the ore
car, and lay down, his elbow on the backpack.
"All right," he said. "Let's say that the Golden Ball really--what
would you wish?"
"You mean, you do believe?" Arthur asked quickly.
"That's not important whether or not I believe. You answer my
question."
He really was interested in what such a young boy, a schoolboy just
yesterday, could ask of the Golden Ball, He enjoyed watching Arthur frown,
tug at his mustache, and look up at him and look away.
"Well, dad's legs, of course. And for everything to be all right at
home."
"You're lying," Redrick said pleasantly. "Keep this in mind, brother.
The Golden Ball only grants your deepest, innermost wishes, the kind that if
they're not granted, it's all over for you!"
Arthur Burbridge blushed, looked up at Redrick once more, and became
even redder. His eyes filled with tears. Redrick grinned.
"I understand," he said almost gently. "All right, it's none of my
business. Keep your secrets to yourself." He suddenly remembered the gun and
thought that while he had the time he should take care of whatever could be
taken care of. "What's that in your back pocket?" he asked casually.
"A gun."
"What do you need it for?"
"To shoot!" Arthur said challengingly.
"Forget it," Redrick said firmly and sat up. "Give it here. There's
nobody to shoot at in the Zone. Give it to me.
Arthur wanted to say something, but kept silent, took the Army Colt
from his pocket and handed it to Redrick by the barrel. Redrick took the gun
by its warm textured handle, tossed it up in the air, and caught it.
"Do you have a handkerchief or something? I want to wrap it up."
He took Arthur's handkerchief, clean and smelling of cologne, wrapped
the gun in it, and put it on the railroad tie.
"We'll leave it here for now. God willing, we'll come back and pick it
up. Maybe we'll have to shoot it out with the patrol guards. However,
shooting it out with them.... Arthur decisively shook his head.
"That's not what I wanted it for," he said sadly. "There's only one
bullet. In case of an accident like Father's."
"So, that's it." Redrick stared at him. "Well, you don't have to worry
about that. If that should happen, I'll drag you back here. I promise. Look,
it's getting light!"
The fog was disappearing before their eyes. It was completely gone from
the embankment and in the distance it was thinning, melting away and showing
the rounded bristly peaks of the hills. Here and there between the hills
could be seen the mottled surface of the stagnant swamps, covered with
sparse thickets of willows, and the horizon, beyond the hills, was filled
with bright yellow explosions of mountain peaks, and the sky above them was
clear and blue. Arthur looked back and gasped with awe. Redrick looked too.
In the east the mountains looked black, and over them the familiar green
wash of color billowed and shone iridescently--the Zone's green dawn.
Redrick got up, went behind the ore car, sat on the embankment, and
watched as the green wash dimmed and quickly turned to pink. The sun's
orange rim came up over the ridge, and purple shadows stretched from the
hills. Everything became harsh and in high relief, he could see things as
clearly as if they were in the palm of his hand. Right in front, two hundred
yards away, Redrick saw the helicopter. It had fallen, apparently, into the
middle of a mosquito mange spot, and its fuselage had been squashed into a
metal pancake. Its tail had remained intact, only slightly bent, and it
stuck out over the glade like a black hook. The stabilizer was also whole,
and it squeaked distinctly, turning in the light breeze. The mange must have
been very powerful, for there hadn't even been a real fire, and the Royal
Air Force insignia was very clear on the flattened metal. Redrick had not
seen one in many years and had almost forgotten what the insignia looked
like.
Redrick went back to his pack for the map, which he spread out on the
hot mound of ore in the car. You couldn't see the quarry from here--it was
blocked by the hill with the burned-out tree on its rise. He had to go
around the hill from the right, along the depression between it and the next
hill, which he could also see, completely bare, its slope covered with brown
rocks.
All the reference points corresponded, but Redrick felt no
satisfaction. His instinct of many years as a stalker protested against the
very thought, which was irrational and unnatural, of laying a path between
two nearby elevations. All right, Redrick thought, we'll see about that
later. It will be clearer when we get there. The path before the depression
led through the swamp, along open flat ground, which seemed safe enough from
here. But looking closer, Redrick noted a dark gray spot between the two dry
hills. He looked at the map. There was an X there, and it said "Whip" next
to it in clumsy letters. The red dotted line of the path went to the right
of the )i. The name was sort of familiar, but who Whip was exactly, and what
he looked like, and what he did, Redrick could not remember. For some
reason, Redrick could only remember the smoky room of the Borscht, huge red
paws holding glasses, thundering laughter, and open jaws filled with yellow
teeth--a fantastic herd of titans and giants gathered at the watering hole,
one of his most striking childhood memories--his first visit to the Borscht.
What had I brought that time? An empty, I think. Straight from the Zone,
wet, hungry, crazy, with a sack over my shoulder, I burst into the bar and
clattered the sack on the counter in front of Ernest, looking around
angrily, listening to the wisecracks, waiting for Ernest--young then and in
a bow tie, as usual --to count the right amount of greenbacks. No, wait, it
wasn't green back then, we still had the square royal bills with some
half-naked dame wearing a cape and a wreath. I waited, put away the money,
and unexpectedly, even for myself, took a heavy mug from the counter and
slammed it into the closest laughing face. Redrick smirked and thought:
maybe that was Whip himself?
"Is it all right to go between the two hills, Mr. Schuhart?" Arthur
asked in a low voice near his ear. He was next to him looking at the map,
too.
"We'll see when we get there." Redrick kept looking at the map. There
were two other X's, one on the slope of the hill with the tree, the other on
the rocks. Poodle and Four-eyes. The path was marked below them. "We'll
see," he repeated, folding up the map and putting it in his pocket.
He looked Arthur over.
"Put the backpack on my back. We'll go like before," he said, shifting
under the weight of the pack and arranging the straps more comfortably. "You
go ahead, so that call see you every second. Don't look back and keep your
ears open. My order is law. Keep in mind that we'll have a lot of crawling
to do, don't suddenly be afraid of the dirt. If I tell you to, drop your
face into the mud without any backtalk. And button your jacket. Ready?"
"Ready." Arthur was very nervous; the rosiness of his cheeks had
disappeared.
First we go this way." Redrick waved sharply in the direction of the
nearest hill a hundred steps from the rocks. "Got it? Let's go."
Arthur heaved a sigh, stepped over the rails, and started down sideways
from the embankment. The pebbles rained after him noisily
"Easy, easy," Redrick said. "There's no hurry."
He started down slowly after him, automatically adjusting his leg
muscles to the weight of the heavy backpack. He watched Arthur out of the
corner of his eye. He's scared, he thought. He must sense it. If his sense
is like his father's, he does. If you only knew how things were turning out,
Buzzard. If you only knew, Buzzard, that I took your advice this time. "This
is one place, Red, that you can't go to alone. Like it or not, you'll have
to take somebody with you. I can give you one of my people who's
expendable." You talked me into it. It's the first time in my life that I
agreed to something like this. Well, maybe it will turn out all right, he
thought. Maybe, somehow, it will work out. After all, I'm not Buzzard
Burbridge, maybe I'll figure something out.
"Stop!" he told Arthur.
The boy stopped ankle-deep in rusty water. By the time Redrick got down
to him, the quagmire had sucked him in up to his knees.
"Do you see that rock?" Redrick asked. "There, under the hill? Head for
it."
Arthur moved on. Redrick let him get ten paces ahead and then followed.
The mud slurped underfoot. It was a dead swamp--no bugs, no frogs, even the
willows were dry and rotten. Redrick looked around, but for now everything
seemed to be in order. The hill slowly got closer, covering the sun, which
was still low in the sky, and finally blocking the entire eastern sky. At
the rock, Redrick looked back at the embankment. It was brightly lit by the
sun. A train of ten ore cars stood oil it. Some of the cars had fallen off
the tracks and were lying on their sides, and the embankment above them was
covered with the rusty red piles of the ore. Further on, in the direction of
the quarry, north of the train, the air over the track shimmered and
undulated, and tiny rainbows exploded and died in the air. Redrick looked at
the shimmer, spat, and turned away.
"Let's go," he said. Arthur turned his tense face to him. "See those
rags over there? You're looking the wrong way! Over there, to the right."
"Yes," said Arthur.
"Well, that was a guy called Whip. A long time ago. He didn't listen to
his elders and now he lies there in order to show smart people the right
way. Look just to the right of Whip. Got it? See the spot? Right where the
willows are a little thicker. That's the way. You're off!"
Now they were moving parallel to the embankment. Every step brought
them to shallower water, and soon they were walking on dry, springy
hillocks. The map still showed this as solid swamp. The map's old, thought
Redrick, Burbridge hasn't been here in a long time, and it's gotten out of
date. That's bad. Of course, it's easier to walk on dry land, but it would
have been better for that swamp to be here. Look at Arthur go, he thought.
He's walking like he's strolling down Central Avenue.
Arthur seemed to have perked up and was walking full speed. He had one
hand in his pocket and he was swinging the other as if out on a stroll.
Redrick rummaged in his pocket, took out a bolt weighing an ounce or so, and
threw it at his head. The bolt hit Arthur in the back of the head. The boy
gasped, grabbed his head, crouched, and fell into the dry grass. Redrick
stood over him.
"That's how it comes out here, Artie," he pontificated. "This isn't an
avenue, we're not on a promenade here, you know. Arthur got up slowly. His
face was drained white.
"Everything clear?" Redrick asked. Arthur gulped and nodded.
"Fine. And next time I'll let you have it in the teeth. If you're still
alive. Go ahead!"
The boy could have made a stalker, after all, thought Redrick. They
probably would have called him Pretty Boy Artie. We used to have another
Pretty Boy, his name was Dixon, but now they called him Hamster. The only
stalker to fall into the meatgrinder and live. He was lucky. The fool still
thinks that it was Burbridge who pulled him out of it. The hell he did! You
don't get pulled out of the meatgrinder. He did pull him out of the Zone,
that's true enough Burbridge performed a heroic deed like that. If he hadn't
... ! Everybody was getting fed up with his tricks, and the guys had told
him: you better not come back if you come back alone. That was when they
began calling him Buzzard, before they used to call him Winner.
Redrick felt a barely perceptible current of air on his left cheek and
immediately, without thinking, he shouted: "Halt!" He extended his hand to
the left. The current was stronger. Some where between them and the
embankment there was a mosquito mange, or maybe it extended along the
embankment itself: there was a reason why the cars had tilted over. Arthur
stood as though he had been planted, he did not even turn around.
"To the right. Let's go."
Yes, he would have made a good stalker. What the hell, do I feel sorry
for him or something? That's all I need. Did anyone ever feel sorry for me?
I guess they did. Kirill felt sorry for me. Dick Noonan feels sorry for me.
Of course, he might be more interested in Guta than in feeling sorry for me,
but one doesn't necessarily rule out the other. Only I don't get to feel
pity. My choice is always either/or. He finally understood the choice:
either this boy, or my Monkey. There was no real choice, it was clear. If
only miracles did happen, some voice said inside, and he repressed the voice
with horror
They went around the mound of gray rags. There was nothing left of
Whip. Some distance away in the dry grass lay a long, completely rusted
stick--a minesweeper. In those days many stalkers used mine sweepers, buying
them up on the quiet from army suppliers, and depended on them like on the
Lord God himself, and then two stalkers were killed within a few days,
killed by underground explosions. And that put an end to it. Who had this
Whip been? Did Buzzard bring him here or had he come on his own? Why were
they all drawn to this quarry? Why hadn't I heard anything about it? Damn
it, it's hot! And this is so early in the morning, I can imagine what it
will be like later.
Arthur, walking five paces ahead, wiped the sweat from his brow.
Redrick squinted up at the sun; it was still low. And suddenly he realized
that the dry grass was not rustling underfoot but squeaking like cornstarch,
and it was no longer stiff and bristly, but soft and crumbly--it was falling
apart under their shoes, like flakes of soot. And he saw Arthur's clear
footprints, and he threw himself down on the ground, shouting: "Hit the
dirt!"
He fell face down into the grass, and it turned into dust under his
cheek. He gnashed his teeth in anger over their bad luck. He lay there
trying not to move, still hoping that it would blow over, even though he
realized that they were trapped. The heat was increasing, over- whelming
him, enveloping his body like a sheet soaked in boiling water. Sweat poured
into his eyes, and Redrick shouted belatedly to Arthur: "Don't move! Bear
it!" And he started bearing it himself.
He would have withstood it, and everything would have passed quietly
and well, they would have gotten by with a lot of sweat, but Arthur couldn't
take it. Either he had not heard Redrick's shout, or he became scared out of
his wits, or maybe, he had been baked more strongly than Redrick--anyway he
lost control and ran off blindly, with a scream deep in his throat,
following his instinct--backward, The very direction they couldn't take.
Redrick barely managed to rise and grab his ankle with both hands. Arthur
fell down with the full weight of-his body, raising a cloud of ashes,
squealed in an unnatural voice, kicked Redrick in the face with his other
foot, and struggled wildly. Redrick, not thinking clearly any more through
the pain, crawled on top of him, touching the leather jacket with his burned
face, trying to press the boy into the ground, holding his long hair with
both hands and desperately kicking his feet and knees at Arthur's legs and
his rear end and at the dirt. He could barely hear the muffled moans coming
from beneath him and his own hoarse shouts:
"Lie there, you toad, lie still, or I'll kill you." Tons and tons of
hot coals were pouring over him, and his clothing was in flames and the
leather of his shoes and jacket was blistering and cracking, and Redrick,
his head mashed into the gray ash, his chest trying to keep the damn boy's
head down, could not stand it. He yelled his lungs out.
He did not remember when it all ended. He understood only that he could
breathe again, that the air was air again, and not steam that burned his
throat, and he realized that they had to hurry and get out from under the
devilish heat before it came crashing down on them again. He got off Arthur,
who was lying perfectly still, tucked both his legs under one arm, and using
his free arm, crawled forward, never taking his eyes off the line where the
grass started again. It was dead, prickly, dry, but it was real and it
seemed like the greatest source of life in the world. The ashes felt gritty
in his teeth, his burnt face gave off heat, and the sweat poured right into
his eyes, probably because he no longer had eyebrows or eyelashes. Arthur
was stretched out behind, his jacket seeming to catch on to every possible
place. Redrick's parboiled hands ached, and the backpack kept bumping into
his burned neck. The pain and lack of air made Redrick think that he was
completely burned and that he would not make it. The fear made him work
harder with his elbow and his knees. just get there, just a little more,
come on, Red, come on, you can make it, like that, just a little more....
Then he lay for a long time, his face and hands in the cold, rusty
water, luxuriating in the smelly, rotten coolness. He could have lain like
that forever, but he forced himself to get up on his knees, throw off the
backpack, crawl over to Arthur, who was still lying motionless some thirty
feet from the swamp, and turn him over on his back. Well, he used to be a
pretty boy. And now that handsome face was a dark gray mask of baked-on
blood and ash. For a few seconds Redrick examined with dull interest the
ruts and furrows made in the mask--the tracks of stones and sticks. Then he
got up on his feet, picked up Arthur by the armpits, and dragged him to the
water. Arthur was breathing hoarsely, moaning once in a while. Redrick threw
him face down into the deepest puddle and fell down next to him, reliving
the pleasure of the wet, icy caress. Arthur gurgled, moved about, braced
himself on his hands, and raised his head. He was bug-eyed, he understood
nothing and was greedily gulping air, coughing and spitting. Then he came to
his senses. His gaze settled on Redrick.
"Phoo-oo-ey." He shook his head, scattering dirty drops of water.
"What was that, Mr. Schuhart?"
"That was death," Redrick murmured and coughed. He felt his face. It
hurt. His nose was swollen, but his brews and lashes, strangely enough, were
in place. And the skin on his hands remained intact, but red.
Arthur was also gingerly touching his face. Now that the horrible mask
had been washed away, his face--also contrary to expectation --turned out to
be all right. There were a few scratches, a bump on his forehead, and his
lower lip was split. But all in all, okay.
"I've never heard of anything like that," Arthur said looking back.
Redrick looked back too. There were many tracks on the gray ashy grass,
and Redrick was amazed to see how short his terrible, endless path had been,
when he crawled to save them from doom. It was only twenty or thirty yards
from one edge of the burnt-out grass to the other, but in his blindness and
fear he had crawled in some wild zigzag, like a roach on a hot skillet, and
thank God he had at least crawled in the right direction. He could have
gotten into the mosquito mange on the left, or he could have gotten turned
around completely. No, that would not have happened to him, he was no
greenhorn. And if it had not been for that fool, then nothing at all would
have happened, he would have gotten blisters on his feet--and that would
have been it as far as injuries.
He looked at Arthur. Arthur was washing up, moaning as he touched the
sore spots. Redrick stood up, and wincing from the pain of his clothes on
his burnt skin, walked to a dry spot and examined the backpack. The pack had
really taken a beating. The top buckles had melted and the vials in the
first-aid kit had burst to hell, and a damp spot reeked of antiseptic.
Redrick opened the pack and started picking out the slivers of glass and
plastic, when he heard Arthur's voice.
"Thank you, Mr. Schuhart! You saved my life!"
Redrick said nothing. Thanks! You fell apart, and I had to rescue you.
"It was my own fault. I heard your order to lie there, but I was really
scared, and when it got so hot--I lost my head. I'm very much afraid of
pain, Mr. Schuhart."
"Why don't you get up?" Redrick said without turning around toward him.
"That was just a sample. Get up, what are you loafing around for?"
Wincing from the pain of the pack on his burned shoulders, he put his
arms through the straps. It felt as though the skin on the burned places had
wrinkled up. He was afraid of pain, was he? Shove you and your pain! He
looked around. It was all right, they hadn't left the path. Now for the
hills with the corpses. The damn hills, just stood there, the lousy mothers,
sticking out like the devil's horns, and that damn depression between them.
He sniffed the air. You damn depression, that's the really lousy part. The
toad.
"See that depression between the hills?" he asked.
"I see it.
"Head straight for it. March!"
Arthur wiped his face with the back of his hand and moved on, splashing
through the puddles. He was limping and did not look as straight and
well-proportioned as he had before. He was bent over and was walking very
carefully. There's another one I pulled out, thought Redrick. What does that
make? Five? Six? And now I wonder why? He's no relation. I'm not responsible
for him. Listen, Red, why did you save him? You almost got it yourself
because of him. Now that my head is clear, I know why. It was right to save
him, I can't manage without him, he's my hostage for Monkey. I didn't save a
human being, I saved my minesweeper. My master key. Back there in the heat,
I never gave it a second thought. I Pulled him out like he was my flesh and
blood, and didn't even think about abandoning him Even though I had
forgotten everything -- the master key and Monkey. What does that mean? It
means that I really am a good guy, after all. That's what Guta insists, and
Kirill used to say, and what Richard is always babbling about. Some good guy
they found! Drop it, he told himself. You have to think first, and then use
your arms and legs. Got that straight? Mr. Nice Guy. I have to save him for
the meatgrinder, he thought coldly and clearly. We can get past everything
except the grinder.
"Stop!"
The depression lay before them, and Arthur was already standing there,
looking at Redrick for orders. The floor of the depression was covered with
a rotten green slime that glinted oilily in the sun. A light steam rose
above it, getting thicker between the hills, and nothing was visible beyond
thirty feet. And it stank. "It'll really stink in there, but don't you
chicken out. Arthur made a noise in the back of his throat and backed away.
Redrick shook himself back to action, pulled from his pocket a wad of cotton
soaked in deodorant, stuffed up his nostrils, and offered some to Arthur.
"Thanks, Mr. Schuhart. Isn't there a land route we could take?" Arthur
asked in a weak voice.
Redrick silently took him by the hair and turned his head in the
direction of the bundle of rags on the stony hillside.
"That was Four-eyes," he said. "And on the left hill, you can't see
from here, lies Poodle. In the same condition. Do you understand? Forward."
The slime was warm and sticky. At first they walked erect, waist- deep
in the slime. Luckily the bottom was rocky and rather even. But soon Redrick
heard the familiar rumble from both sides. There was nothing on the left
hill except the intense sunlight, but on the right slope, in the shade, pale
purple lights were fluttering
"Bend low!" he whispered and bent over himself. ''Lower, stupid!''
Arthur bent over in fright, and a clap of thunder shattered the air. Right
over their heads an intricate lightning bolt danced furiously, barely
visible against the bright sky. Arthur sat down, shoulder deep in the slime.
Redrick, ears clogged by the noise, turned and saw a bright red spot quickly
melting in the shade among the pebbles and rocks, and there was another
thunderclap.
"Forward! Forward!" he shouted, unable to hear himself.
Now they were moving in a crouch, Indian file, only their heads
exposed. At every peal Redrick watched Arthur's long hair stand on end and
could feel a thousand needles puncturing his face. "For- ward!" he kept
repeating. "Forward!" He could not hear a thing any more. Once he saw
Arthur's profile, and he saw his terror-stricken eyes bulging out and his
white bouncing lips and his green-smeared sweaty cheek. Then the lightning
began striking so low that they had to duck their heads. The green slime
gummed his mouth, making it hard to breathe. Gulping for air, Redrick tore
the cotton out of his nose and discovered that the reek was gone, that the
air was filled with the fresh, piercing odor of ozone, and that the steam
was getting thicker, or maybe he was blacking out, and he could no longer
see either of the two hills. All he could see was Arthur's head sticky with
green slime and the billowing clouds of yellow steam.
I'll get through, I'll get through, Redrick thought; this is nothing
new. My whole life is like this. I'm stuck in filth and there's lightning
over my head. It's never been any other way. Where is all this gunk coming
from? You could go crazy from this much gunk in one place! Buzzard Burbridge
did this: he walked through and left this behind. Four-eyes lay on the
right, Poodle on the left, and all so that Buzzard could walk between them
and leave all his filth behind. That's what you deserve, he told himself.
Whoever walks behind Buzzard walks up to his neck in filth. You didn't know
that? There are too many buzzards, that's why there isn't a single clean
place left.
Noonan's a fool: Redrick, Red, you violate the balance, you destroy the
order, you're unhappy, Red, under any order, any system. You're not happy
under a bad one, you're not happy under a good one. It's people like you who
keep us from having the Kingdom of Heaven on Earth. What do you know, fatso?
Where have you seen a good system? When have you ever seen me under a good
system? He slipped on a stone that turned under his foot, and fell in. He
surfaced and saw Arthur's terrified face right next to his. For a second he
felt a chill: he thought that he had lost his way. But he had not gotten
lost. He realized immediately that they had to go that way, where the black
top of the rock stuck out of the slime; he realized that even though there
was nothing else visible in the yellow fog.
"Stop!" he shouted. "Keep right! To the right of the rock!"
He could not hear his own voice. He caught up with Arthur, grabbed his
shoulder, and pointed: keep right of the rock and keep your head down.
You'll pay for this, he thought. Arthur dove under at the rock, just as a
lightning bolt hit it, smashing it to smithereens. You'll pay for this, he
repeated, as he ducked under and worked furiously with his arms and legs. He
could hear another peal of thunder. I'll shake your souls out of you for
this! He had a fleeting thought: who do I mean? I don't know. But somebody
has to pay for this, and somebody will! Just wait, just let me get to the
ball, when I get to the ball, I'm no Buzzard, I'll get what I want from you.
When they finally scrambled out onto dry land that was covered by
sun-heated pebbles, they were half-deaf, turned inside out, and staggering
and holding on to each other. Redrick saw the peeling pick-up truck, sagging
on its axles, and he remembered that they could rest in the shade of the
truck. They crawled into the shade. Arthur lay on his back and began
unbuttoning his jacket with limp fingers, and Redrick leaned his backpack
against the side of the truck, wiped his hands against the small rocks, and
reached inside his jacket.
"And me, too." Arthur said. "Me too."
Redrick was surprised by the loudness of the boy's voice. He took a
sip, shut his eyes, and handed the flask to Arthur. That's it, he thought
weakly. We got through. We got through even this. And now, accounts payable
upon demand. Do you think that I forgot? No way, I remember it all. Do you
think I'll thank you for letting me live and not drowning me? You get zilch
from me. This is the end for all of you, get it? I'm not leaving any of
this. From now on, I make all the decisions. I, Redrick Schuhart, being of
sound mind and body, will make all the decisions for everybody. And as for
all of you, buzzards, toads, Visitors, Boneses, Quarterblads, bloodsuckers,
green- backers, Throaties, in your suits and ties, clean and fresh, with
your briefcases and speeches and good deeds and employment opportunities,
and your eternal batteries and eternal engines and mosquito manges and false
promises--I've had enough, you've led me by the nose long enough. All my
life you've led me by the nose, and I thought and bragged that I was living
the way I wanted to, fool, and all the time you were egging me on and
winking among yourselves, and leading me by the nose, dragging me, hauling
me through jails and bars. I've had it! He unsnapped the straps of the pack
and took the Bask from Arthur.
"I never thought...." Arthur was saying with meek disbelief in his
voice. "I couldn't even imagine. I knew about death and fire and all, of
course, but something like that! How are we going to get back?"
Redrick was not listening. What that thing was saying no longer had any
meaning. It had no meaning before, either, but before it was a person at
least. And now, it was like a talking key, a key to open the way to the
Golden Ball. Let it talk.
"If we get some water," Arthur said. "At least wash our faces.
Redrick looked at him distractedly, saw the disheveled and glued-
together hair, the face smeared with drying slime with finger marks in it,
and all of him covered with a crust of oozing slime, and he felt no pity, no
irritation, nothing. A talking key. He turned away. A dreary expanse, like
an abandoned construction site, yawned before them. It was covered with
broken brick, sprinkled with white dust, and highlighted by the blinding
sun, which was unbearably white, hot, angry, and dead. The far end of the
quarry was visible from there --also blindingly white and at that distance
seemingly perfectly smooth and perpendicular. The near end was marked by
large breaks and boulders, and there was the path down into the quarry,
where the excavator's cabin stood out like a red splotch against the white
rock. That was the only landmark. They had to head for it, depending on dumb
luck to guide them.
Arthur propped himself up, stuck his arm under the truck, and pulled
out a rusty tin can.
"Look at that, Mr. Schuhart," he said, livening up. "Father must have
left this. There's more under there.
Redrick didn't reply. That's a mistake, he thought, dispassionately.
Better not think about your father now, you'd be better off not saying
anything. On the other hand, it doesn't matter. Getting up, he winced: his
clothes had stuck to his body, to his burned skin, and now something was
tearing inside, like a dried bandage pulling from a wound. Arthur also
groaned as he got up; he gave Redrick a martyred look. It was clear that he
wanted to complain but that he didn't dare. He only said in a strangled
voice:
"Do you think I might have another sip, Mr. Schuhart?"
Redrick put the flask that he had been holding back under his shirt.
"Do you see that red between the rocks?"
"I see it," Arthur said and shuddered.
"Straight for it. Let's go."
Arthur stretched his arms, straightened his shoulders, grimaced, and
said looking around:
"I wish I could wash up. Everything's sticking."
Redrick waited silently. Arthur looked at him hopelessly, nodded, and
was about to start when he stopped suddenly.
"The backpack. You forgot the backpack, Mr. Schuhart."
"March!" Redrick ordered.
He did not want to explain or to lie, and there was no need. He would
go anyway. He had nowhere else to go. He'd go. And Arthur went. He wandered
on, hunched over, dragging his feet, trying to pick off the baked slime from
his face, looking small, scrawny, and forlorn, like a wet stray kitten.
Redrick walked behind him, and as soon as he stepped out of the shade, the
sun seared and blinded him, and he shaded his eyes with his hand and was
sorry that he had not taken his sunglasses.
Every step raised a cloud of white dust, and the dust settled on his
shoes and gave off an unbearable stench. Or rather, it came from Arthur, it
was impossible to walk behind him. It took him a while to understand that
the stench was coming from himself. The odor was disgusting, but somehow
familiar--that was the smell that filled the city on the days that the north
wind carried the smoke from the plant. And his father smelled that way, too,
when he came home, hungry, gloomy, with red wild eyes. And Redrick would
hurry to hide in some faraway corner and watch in fear as his father tore
off his work clothes and tossed them to his mother, pulled off his huge,
worn shoes and shoved them on the floor of the closet, and stalked off to
the shower in his stocking feet, leaving sticky footprints. He would stay in
the shower, grunting and slapping his body, for a long time, splashing water
and muttering under his breath, until he shouted so that the house shook:
"Maria! Are you asleep?" He had to wait until his father had washed and
seated himself at the table, where a pint bottle, a bowl with thick soup,
and bottle of catsup were ready for him. Wait until he had slurped up all
the soup and started on the pork and beans, and then he could creep out into
the light, climb up on his lap, and ask which shop steward and which
engineer he had drowned in vitriol that day.
Everything around him was white hot, and he was dizzy from the cruel
dry heat, the exhaustion, and the unbearable pain of his skin blistering at
the joints; it seemed to him, through the hot haze that was enveloping his
consciousness, that his skin was crying out to him, begging him for peace,
for water, for coolness. The memories, worn to the point of
unrecognizability, were crowding each other in his swollen brain, knocking
each other over, blending, tumbling, mingling with the white hot world that
was flaming before his half-closed eyes, and they were all bitter, and they
all evoked self-pity or hatred. He tried to fight the chaos, to summon from
the past some sweet mirage, a feeling of tenderness or cheerfulness. He
squeezed out the fresh laughing face of Guta from the depths of his memory,
when she was still a girl, desired and untouched, and her face appeared, but
was immediately blanketed by rust and then twisted and deformed into the
sullen face of Monkey, covered with coarse brown fur. He struggled to
remember Kirill, that sainted man, his swift, sure movements, his laugh, his
voice, which promised unheard-of marvelous places and times, and Kirill
appeared; but then a silver cobweb exploded on the sun and Kirill was no
more, and Throaty's unblinking angelic eyes stared at Redrick, a porcelain
container in his big white hand.... The dark thoughts festering in his
subconscious knocked down the barrier his will tried to create and
extinguished the little good that his memory contained, and it seemed that
there had never been anything good at all, only ugly, vicious faces.
And during all this time, he never stopped being a stalker. Without
realizing it, he recorded somewhere in his nervous system the essential
information: that on the left, at a safe distance, there was a jolly ghost
over a pile of old planks--it was quiet, exhausted, and so the hell with it;
on the right there was a slight breeze, and a few steps later he saw a
mirror-smooth mosquito mange, with many arms, like a starfish-far away, no
danger--and right in its center, a flattened bird, a rare sight, since birds
did not often fly over the Zone; and right by the path there were two
abandoned empties--apparently Buzzard had dropped them on the way back, fear
is stronger than greed. He saw all of this and took it into account, and
Arthur had only to stray a single foot from their path for Redrick's mouth
to open and the hoarse warning to fly automatically from his throat. A
machine, he thought. You made a machine out of me. The broken rocks at the
edge of the quarry were getting closer, and he could see the fanciful
designs made by rust on the cabin's red roof.
You fool, you, Burbridge, Redrick thought. You're clever, but you're a
fool. How could you have trusted me? You've known me for so long, you should
know me better than I know myself. You're getting old, that must be it.
Getting dumber. But what am I saying, I've been dealing with fools all my
life. And then he pictured Buzzard's face when he discovered that Arthur,
his sweet Artie, his one and only son, that his pride and joy had gone into
the Zone with Red after Buzzard's legs, not some expendable punk. He
pictured his face and laughed. When Arthur turned his frightened face to
look at him, Redrick went on laughing and motioned him on. And then the
faces crawled across his consciousness again like pictures on a screen.
Everything had to be changed. Not one life or two lives, not one fate or
two--every link in this rotten, stinking world had to be changed.
Arthur stopped at the steep descent into the quarry, froze in his
steps, straining to look down and into the distance, extending his long
neck. Redrick joined him. But he did not look where Arthur was looking.
Right at their feet the road into the quarry began, torn up many years
ago by the treads and wheels of heavy vehicles. To the right was a white
steep slope, cracked by the heat; the next slope was half excavated, and
among the rocks and rubble stood a bulldozer, its lowered bucket jammed
impotently against the side of the road. And, as was to be expected, there
was nothing else to be seen on the road, except for the black twisted
stalactites that looked like fat candles hanging from the jagged edges of
the slope, and a multitude of black splotches in the dust, as though someone
had spilled bitumen. That was all that was left of them, it was even
impossible to tell how many there had been. Maybe each splotch represented a
person, or one of Buzzard's wishes. That one there was Buzzard coming back
alive and unharmed from the basement of Complex #7. That bigger one over
there was Buzzard getting the wriggling magnet out of the Zone unscathed.
And that icicle was the luxurious Dina Burbridge, who resembled neither her
mother nor her father. And that spot there was Arthur Burbridge, unlike his
father and mother, Artie, the handsome son, their pride and joy.
"We made it!" Arthur rasped deliriously. "Mr. Schuhart, we did make it,
after all, right?"
He laughed a happy laugh, crouched down, and beat both fists as hard as
he could on the ground. His matted hair bounced ridiculously, and dried
clumps of dirt flew in all directions. And only then did Redrick look up at
the ball. Carefully. With caution. With a hidden fear that it would turn out
wrong--that it would disappoint him, evoke doubts, throw him from the cloud
that he had managed to scramble up on, and leave him to wallow in filth.
It was not golden, it was more a copper color, reddish, and completely
smooth, and it shone dully in the sun. It lay at the foot of the quarry's
far wall, cozily ensconced amid the piles of accumulated rocks, and even
from that distance, he could see how heavy and massive it was, and how
solidly it lay in its place.
There was nothing disappointing or doubt-inspiring about it, but there
was nothing to inspire hope either. For some reason, his first thought was
that it was probably hollow and that it should be hot to the touch from
being in the sun. It obviously did not glow with its own light and it
obviously was incapable of floating up and dancing in the air, the way so
many of the tales had it. It lay where it had fallen. Maybe it had fallen
out of some monstrously huge pocket or had gotten lost, rolled away during
some game between some giants. It had not been carefully placed here, it had
been left behind, littering up the Zone like all the empties, bracelets,
batteries, and other rubbish remaining after the Visitation.
But at the same time, there was something about it, and the longer
Redrick looked at it, the clearer it became that it was pleasant to look at
it, that he wanted to go up to it, to touch it, pat it, and suddenly the
thought came to him that it would be good, probably, to sit down next to it,
or even better, to lean back against it, close his eyes, and think,
reminisce, and maybe just dream and drowse and rest.... Arthur jumped up,
tore open all the zippers on his jacket, took it off, and threw it down
smack at his feet, raising a cloud of white dust. He was shouting something,
making faces and waving his arms, and then he put his hands behind his back,
and dancing a jig, headed down the slope. He was not looking at Redrick any
more, he had forgotten Redrick, he had forgotten everything. He was going
down to make his wishes come true, the little secret wishes of a blushing
college student, of a boy who had never seen any money beyond his allowance,
who had been beaten mercilessly if he had a whiff of alcohol on his breath
when he came home, and who was being groomed to be a famous lawyer, and in
the future, a cabinet minister, and in the distant future, and as his
greatest prospect--president. Redrick, squinting his swollen eyes against
the blinding light, silently watched him go. He was cool and calm, he knew
what was about to happen, and he knew that he would not watch, but it was
still all right to watch, and he did, feeling nothing in particular, except
that deep inside a little worm started wriggling around and twisting its
sharp head in his gut.
And the boy kept walking down, dancing a jig, shuffling to his own
beat, and the white dust rose from his heels, and he was shouting at the top
of his lungs, clearly, joyously, and festively--either a song or an
incantation--and Redrick thought that this was the first time in the history
of the quarry that a man went down there as though he were going to a party.
And at first he did not listen to what his talking key was yelling, and then
something clicked inside him and he heard:
"Happiness for everybody! ... Free! ... As much as you want! .. .
Everybody come here! . . . There's enough for everybody! Nobody will leave
unsatisfied! ... Free! ... Happiness! ... Free!"
And then he was suddenly silent, as though a huge fist had punched him
in the mouth. And Redrick saw the transparent emptiness that was lurking in
the shadow of the excavator's bucket grab him, throw him up in the air, and
slowly slowly twist him, like a housewife wringing her wash. Redrick had
time to see one of his dusty shoes fall off his jerking leg and fly high
above the quarry. Then he turned away and sat down. There wasn't a single
thought in his head, and he had somehow stopped sensing himself. Silence
hung heavy in the air, particularly behind him, there on the road. Then he
remembered the flask, without particular joy, but just as medicine that it
was time to take. He unscrewed the cap and drank with tiny stingy sips, and
for the first time in his life he wished that instead of liquor, the Bask
contained cold water.
Time passed, and more or less coherent thoughts came to him. Well,
that's it, he thought unwillingly. The road is open. He could go down right
now, but it was better, of course, to wait a while. The meatgrinders can be
tricky. Anyway, he had some thinking to do. An unaccustomed exercise,
thinking, that was the trouble. What was "thinking" anyway? Thinking meant
finding a loophole, pulling a bluff, pulling the wool over someone's
eyes--but all that was out of place here.
All right. Monkey, his father.... Make them pay for that, steal the
bastards' souls, let the sons of bitches eat what I've been eating. ... No,
that's not it, Red.... I mean, that is it, but what does it mean? What do I
need? That's cursing, not thinking. A terrible presentiment chilled him, and
quickly skipping over the many arguments that were still ahead of him, he
told himself angrily: this is how it is, Red, you won't leave here until you
figure it out, you'll drop dead here next to the ball, burn to death and
rot, but you won't leave.
God, where are the words, where are my thoughts? He slapped his head. I
have never had a thought in my entire life! Wait, wait, Kirill used to say
something like that. Kirill! He feverishly dug through his memories, and
words Boated to the surface, familiar ones and unfamiliar, but it was all
wrong, because Kirill had not left words behind. He had left pictures,
vague, and very kind, but thoroughly improbable.
Meanness and treachery. They let me down in this too, they left me
speechless, the bastards. A bum--I was always a bum, and now I'm an old bum.
It's not right, do you hear me? In the future, for once and for all, it
should be outlawed! Man is born in order to think (there he is, old Kirill
at last!). Only I don't believe it. I didn't believe it before and I don't
believe it now. And I don't know what man is born for. I was born. So here I
am. People eat whatever they can. Let all of us be healthy and let all of
them drop dead. Who is us and who are they? I don't understand a thing. If
I'm happy, Burbridge isn't, if Burbridge's happy, Four-eyes isn't, if
Throaty is happy, no one else is, and if things are bad for Throaty, he's
the only one fool enough to think he'll manage somehow. God, it's just one
long brawl! I fight all my life with Captain Quarterblad, and he fights all
his life with Throaty, and all he wants from me is that I give up stalking.
But how can I give up stalking when I have a family to feed? Get a job? I
don't want to work for you, your work makes me puke, do you understand? This
is the way I figure it: if a man works with you, he is always working for
one of you, he is a slave and nothing else. And I always wanted to be
myself, on my own, so that I could spit at you all, at your boredom and
despair.
He finished the dregs of the brandy and threw the empty flask to the
ground with all his might. The flask bounced, flashing in the sun, and
rolled away. He forgot about it immediately. He sat there, covering his eyes
with his hands, and he was trying--not to understand, not to think, but
merely to see something of how things should be, but all he saw were the
faces, faces, faces, and more faces ... and greenbacks, bottles, bundles of
rags that were once people, and columns of figures. He knew that it all had
to be destroyed, and he wanted to destroy it, but he guessed that if it all
disappeared there would be nothing left but the flat, bare earth. His
frustration and despair made him want to lean back against the ball. He got
up, automatically brushed off his pants, and started down into the quarry.
The sun was broiling hot, red spots floated before his eyes, the air
was quivering on the floor of the quarry, and in the shimmer it seemed that
the ball was dancing in place like a buoy on the waves. He went past the
bucket, superstitiously picking up his feet higher and making sure not to
step on the splotches. And then, sinking into the rubble, he dragged himself
across the quarry to the dancing, winking ball. He was covered with sweat
and panting from the heat, and at the same time, a chill was running through
him, he was shuddering, as if he had a bad hangover, and the sweet chalk
dust gritted between his teeth. He had stopped trying to think. He just
repeated his litany over and over: "I am an animal, you see that. I don't
have the words, they didn't teach me the words. I don't know how to think,
the bastards didn't let me learn how to think. But if you really are ...
all-powerful ... all-knowing ... then you figure it out! Look into my heart.
I know that everything you need is in there. It has to be. I never sold my
soul to anyone! It's mine, it's human! You take from me what it is I want
... it just can't be that I would want something bad! Damn it all, I can't
think of anything, except those words of his ...'HAPPINESS FOR EVERYBODY,
FREE, AND NO ONE WILL GO AWAY UNSATISFIED!' "