those babies. He picks them up and walks back into the kitchen with them dangling from the first two fingers
of his right hand. He's standing there with them by the stove when Lupe comes walking into the kitchen from
the alley.
"Don?" he asks. His voice is a little furry, the voice of someone who has just awakened from a sound sleep. It
also sounds amused. He points at the shoes hooked over the tips of Callahan's fingers. "Were you going to
put those in the stew ?"
"It might improve the flavor, but no, just in storage," Callahan says. He is astounded by the calmness of his
own voice. And his heart! Beating along at a nice regular sixty or seventy beats a minute. "Someone left them
out back. What have you been up to?"
Lupe gives him a smile, and when he smiles, he is more beautiful than ever. "Just out there, having a smoke,"
he says. "It was too nice to come in. Didn't you see me?"
"As a matter of fact, I did," Callahan said. "You looked lost in your own little world, and I didn't want to
interrupt you. Open the storage-room door for me, would you?"
Lupe opens the door. "That looks like a really nice pair," he says. "Bally. What's someone doing, leaving
Bally shoes for the drunks'?"
"Someone must have changed his mind about them," Callahan says. He hears the bells, that poison
sweetness, and grits his teeth against the sound. The world seems to shimmer for a moment. Not now, he
thinks. Ah, not now, please.
It's not a prayer, he prays little these days, but maybe something hears, because the sound of the chimes
fades. The world steadies. From the other room someone is bawling for supper. Someone else is cursing.
Same old same old. And he wants a drink. That's the same, too, only the craving is fiercer than it's ever been.
He keeps thinking about how the rubber grip felt in his hand. The weight of the cleaver. The sound it made.
And the taste is back in his mouth. The dead taste of Barlow's blood. That, too. What did the vampire say in
the Petries' kitchen, after it had broken the crucifix his mother had given him ? That it was sad to see a man's
faith fail.
I'll sit in on the AA meeting tonight, he thinks, putting a rubber band around the Bally loafers and tossing
them in with the rest of the footwear. Sometimes the meetings help. He never says, "I'm Don and I'm an
alcoholic," but sometimes they help.
Lupe is so close behind him when he turns around that he gasps a little.
"Easy, boy," Lupe says, laughing. He scratches his throat casually. The marks are still there, but they'll be
gone in the morning. Still, Callahan knows the vampires see something. Or smell it. Or some damn thing.
"Listen," he says to Lupe, "I've been thinking about getting out of the city for a week or two. A little R and R.
Why don't we go together? We could go upstate. Do some fishing."
"Can't," Lupe says. "I don't have any vacation time coming at the hotel until June, and besides, we're
shorthanded here. But if you want to go, I'll square it with Rowan. No problem." Lupe looks at him closely.
"You could use some time off, looks like. You look tired. And you're jumpy."
"Nah, it was just an idea," Callahan says. He's not going anywhere. If he stays, maybe he can watch out for
Lupe. And he knows something now. Killing them is no harder than swatting bugs on a wall. And they don't
leave much behind. E-ZKleen-Up, as they say in the TV ads. Lupe will be all right. The Type Threes like Mr.
Mark Cross Briefcase don't seem to kill their prey, or even change them. At least not that he can see, not over
the short term. But he will watch, he can do that much. He will mount a guard. It will be one small act of
atonement for Jerusalem's Lot. And Lupe will be all right.
ELEVEN
"Except he wasn't," Roland said. He was carefully rolling a cigarette from the crumbs at the bottom of his
poke. The paper was brittle, the tobacco really not much more than dust.
"No," Callahan agreed. "He wasn't. Roland, I have no cigarette papers, but I can do you better for a smoke
than that. There's good tobacco in the house, from down south. I don't use it, but Rosalita sometimes likes a
pipe in the evening."
"I'll take you up on that later and say thankya," the gunslinger said. "I don't miss it as much as coffee, but
almost. Finish your tale. Leave nothing out, I think it's important we hear it all, but—"
"I know. Time is short."
"Yes," Roland said. "Time is short."
"Then briefly put, my friend contracted this disease—AIDS became the name of choice?"
He was looking at Eddie, who nodded.
"All right," Callahan said. "It's as good a name as any, I guess, although the first thing I think of when I hear
that word is a kind of diet candy. You may know it doesn't always spread fast, but in my friend's case, it
moved like a fire in straw. By mid-May of 1976, Lupe Delgado was very ill. He lost his color. He was
feverish a lot of the time. He'd sometimes spend the whole night in the bathroom, vomiting. Rowan would
have banned him from the kitchen, but he didn't need to—Lupe banned himself. And then the blemishes
began to show up."
"They called those Eaposi's sarcoma, I think," Eddie said. "A skin disease. Disfiguring."
Callahan nodded. "Three weeks after the blemishes started showing up, Lupe was in New York General.
Rowan Magruder and I went to see him one night in late June. Up until then we'd been telling each other he'd
turn it around, come out of it better than ever, hell, he was young and strong. But that night we knew the
minute we were in the door that he was all through. He was in an oxygen tent. There were IV lines running
into his arms. He was in terrible pain. He didn't want us to get close to him. It might be catching, he said. In
truth, no one seemed to know much about it."
"Which made it scarier than ever," Susannah said.
"Yes. He said the doctors believed it was a blood disease spread by homosexual activity, or maybe by sharing
needles. And what he wanted us to know, what he kept saying over and over again, was that he was clean, all
the drug tests came back negative. 'Not since nineteen-seventy,' he kept saying. 'Not one toke off one joint. I
swear to God.' We said we knew he was clean. We sat on either side of his bed and he took our hands."
Callahan swallowed. There was an audible click in his throat.
"Our hands… he made us wash them before we left. Just in case, he said. And he thanked us for coming. He
told Rowan that Home was the best thing that ever happened to him. That as far as he was concerned, it
really was home.
"I never wanted a drink as badly as I did that night, leaving New York General. I kept Rowan right beside
me, though, and the two of us walked past all the bars. That night I went to bed sober, but I lay there knowing
it was really just a matter of time. The first drink is the one that gets you drunk, that's what they say in
Alcoholics Anonymous, and mine was somewhere close. Somewhere a bartender was just waiting for me to
come in so he could pour it out.
"Two nights later, Lupe died."
"There must have been three hundred people at the funeral, almost all of them people who'd spent time in
Home. There was a lot of crying and a lot of wonderful things said, some by folks who probably couldn't
have walked a chalk line. When it was over, Rowan Magruder took me by the arm and said, "I don't know
who you are, Don, but I know what you are— one hell of a good man and one hell of a bad drunk who's been
dry for… how long has it been?"
"I thought about going on with the bullshit, but it just seemed like too much work. 'Since October of last
year,' I said.
" 'You want one now,' he said. 'That's all over your face. So I tell you what: if you think taking a drink will
bring Lupe back, you have my permission. In fact, come get me and we'll go down to the Blarney Stone
together and drink up what's in my wallet first. Okay?'
" 'Okay,' I said."
"He said, "You getting drunk today would be the worst memorial to Lupe I could think of. Like pissing in his
dead face.'
"He was right, and I knew it. I spent the rest of that day the way I spent my second one in New York, walking
around, fighting that taste in my mouth, fighting the urge to score a bottle and stake out a park bench. I
remember being on Broadway, then over on Tenth Avenue, then way down at Park and Thirtieth. By then it
was getting dark, cars going both ways on Park with their lights on. The sky all orange and pink in the west,
and the streets full of this gorgeous long light.
"A sense of peace came over me, and I thought, 'I'm going to win. Tonight at least, I'm going to win.' And that
was when the chimes started. The loudest ever. I felt as if my head would burst. Park Avenue shimmered in
front of me and I thought, Why, it's not real at all. Not Park Avenue, not any of it. It's just a gigantic swatch
of canvas. New York is nothing but a backdrop painted on that canvas, and what's behind it? Why, nothing.
Nothing at all. Just blackness.
"Then things steadied again. The chimes faded… faded… finally gone. I started to walk, very slowly. Like a
man walking on thin ice. What I was afraid of was that if I stepped too heavily, I might plunge right out of
the world and into the darkness behind it. I know that makes absolutely no sense— hell, I knew it then—but
knowing a thing doesn't always help. Does it?"
"No," Eddie said, thinking of his days snorting heroin with Henry.
"No," said Susannah.
"No," Roland agreed, thinking of Jericho Hill. Thinking of the fallen horn.
"I walked one block, then two, then three. I started to think it was going to be okay. I mean, I might get the
bad smell, and I might see a few Type Threes, but I could handle those things. Especially since the Type
Threes didn't seem to recognize me. Looking at them was like looking through one-way glass at suspects in a
police interrogation room. But that night I saw something much, much worse than a bunch of vampires."
"You saw someone who was actually dead," Susannah said.
Callahan turned to her with a look of utter, flabbergasted surprise. "How… how do you…"
"I know because I've been todash in New York, too," Susannah said. "We all have. Roland says those are
people who either don't know they've passed on or refuse to accept it. They're… what'd you call em,
Roland?"
"The vagrant dead," the gunslinger replied. "There aren't many."
"There were enough," Callahan said, "and they knew I was there. Mangled people on Park Avenue, one of
them a man without eyes, one a woman missing the arm and leg on the right side of her body and burned all
over, both of them looking at me, as if they thought I could… fix them, somehow.
"I ran. And I must have run one hell of a long way, because when I came back to something like sanity, I was
sitting on the curb at Second Avenue and Nineteenth Street, head hung down, panting like a steam engine.
"Some old geezer came along and asked if I was all right. By then I'd caught enough of my breath to tell him
that I was. He said that in that case I'd better move along, because there was an NYPD radio-car just a couple
of blocks away and it was coming in our direction. They'd roust me for sure, maybe bust me. I looked the old
guy in the eyes and said, 'I've seen vampires. Killed one, even. And I've seen the walking dead. Do you think
I'm afraid of a couple of cops in a radio-car?'
"He backed off. Said to keep away from him. Said I'd looked okay, so he tried to do me a favor. Said this was
what he got. 'In New York, no good deed goes unpunished,' he said, and stomped off down the street like a
kid having a tantrum.
"I started laughing. I got up off the curb and looked down at myself. My shirt was untucked all the way
around. I had crud on my pants from running into something, I couldn't even remember what. I looked
around, and there by all the saints and all the sinners was the Americano Bar. I found out later there are
several of them in New York, but I thought then that one had moved down from the Forties just for me. I
went inside, took the stool at the end of the bar, and when the bartender came down, I said, "You've been
keeping something for me.'
" 'Is that so, my pal?' he said.
" 'Yes,' I said.
" 'Well,' he said, "you tell me what it is, and I'll get it for you.'
" 'It's Bushmill's, and since you've had it since last October, why don't you add the interest and make it a
double.'
Eddie winced. "Bad idea, man."
"Right then it seemed like the finest idea ever conceived by the mind of mortal man. I'd forget Lupe, stop
seeing dead people, perhaps even stop seeing the vampires… the mosquitoes, as I came to think of them.
"By eight o'clock I was drunk. By nine, I was very drunk. By ten, I was as drunk as I'd ever been. I have a
vague memory of the barman throwing me out. A slightly better one of waking up the next morning in the
park, under a blanket of newspapers."
"Back to the beginning," Susannah murmured.
"Aye, lady, back to the beginning, you say true, I say thankya. I sat up. I thought my head was going to split
wide open. I put it down between my knees, and when it didn't explode, I raised it again. There was an old