sunglasses. Good looking from what he could see.
"Wheel it," Richards said.
She did the predictable; slammed both feet on the brake and screamed. Richards was thrown forward, his bad ankle scraping excruciatingly. The air car juddered to a stop on the shoulder, fifty feet beyond the intersection.
"You're that... you're... R-R-R-"
"Ben Richards. Take your hands off the wheel. Put them in your lap.
She did it, shuddering convulsively. She would not look at him. Afraid, Richards supposed, that she would be turned to stone.
"What's your name, ma'am?"
"A-Amelia Williams. Don't shoot me. Don't kill me. I... I... you can have my money only for God sake don't kill meeeeeeee-"
"Shhhhh," Richards said soothingly. "Shhhhh, shhhhhh." When she had quieted a little he said: "I won't try to change your mind about me, Mrs. Williams. Is it Mrs.?"
"Yes," she said automatically.
"But I have no intention of harming you. Do you understand that?"
"Yes," she said, suddenly eager. "You want the car. They got your friend and now you need a car. You can take it-it's insured-I won't even tell. I swear I won't. I'll say someone stole it in the parking lot-"
"We'll talk about it," Richards said. "Begin to drive. Go up Route 1 and we'll talk about it. Are there roadblocks?"
"N-yes. Hundreds of them. They'll catch you.
"Don't lie, Mrs. Williams. Okay?"
She began to drive, erratically at first, then more smoothly. The motion seemed to soothe her. Richards repeated his question about roadblocks.
"Around Lewiston," she said with frightened unhappiness. "That's where they got that other mag-fellow.
"How far is that?"
"Thirty miles or more."
Parrakis had gotten farther than Richards would have dreamed.
"Will you rape me?" Amelia Williams asked so suddenly that Richards almost barked with laughter.
"No," he said; then, matter-of-factly: "I'm married."
"I saw her," she said with a kind of smirking doubtfulness that made Richards want to smash her. Eat garbage, bitch. Kill a rat that was hiding in the breadbox, kill it with a whiskbroom and then see how you talk about my wife.
"Can I get off here?" she asked pleadingly, and he felt a trifle song for her again.
"No," he said. "You're my protection, Mrs. Williams. I have to get to Voigt Field, in a place called Derry. You're going to see that I get there."
"That's a hundred and fifty miles!" she wailed.
"Someone else told me a hundred."
"They were wrong. You'll never get through to there."
"I might," Richards said, and then looked at her. "And so might you, if you play it right."
She began to tremble again but said nothing. Her attitude was that of a woman waiting to wake up.
MINUS 044 AND COUNTING
They traveled north through autumn burning like a torch.
The trees were not dead this far north, murdered by the big, poisonous smokes of Portland, Manchester, and Boston; they were all hues of yellow, red, brilliant starburst purple. They awoke in Richards an aching feeling of melancholy. It was a feeling he never would have suspected his emotions could have harbored only two weeks before. In another month the snow would fly and cover all of it.
Things ended in fall.
She seemed to sense his mood and said nothing. The driving filled the silence between them, lulled them. They passed over the water at Yarmouth, then there were only woods and trailers and miserable poverty shacks with outhouses tacked on the sides (yet one could always spot the Free-Vee cable attachment, bolted on below a sagging, paintless windowsill or beside a hinge-smashed door, winking and heliographing in the sun) until they entered Freeport.
There were three police cruisers parked just outside of town, the cops meeting in a kind of roadside conference. The woman stiffened like a wire, her face desperately pale, but Richards felt calm.
They passed the police without notice, and she slumped.
"If they had been monitoring traffic, they would have been on us like a shot," Richards said casually. "You might as well paint BEN RICHARDS IS IN THIS CAR on your forehead in Day-Glo."
"Why can't you let me go?" she burst out, and in the same breath: "Have you got a jay?"
Rich folks blow Dokes. The thought brought a bubble of ironic laughter and he shook his head.
"You're laughing at me?" she asked, stung. "You've got some nerve, don't you, you cowardly little murderer! Scaring me half out of my life, probably planning to kill me the way you killed those poor boys in Boston-
"There was a full gross of those poor boys," Richards said. "Ready to kill me. That's their job."
"Killing for pay. Ready to do anything for money. Wanting to overturn the