chat, Roland seemed satisfied and rejoined the others. He hunkered-no problem doing that now that his joints had limbered up-and looked at Ted.
"This fellow's name is Haylis of Chayven. Will anyone miss him?"
"Unlikely," Ted said. "The Rods show up at the gate beyond the dorms in littie groups, looking for work. Fetching and carrying, mostly. They're given a meal or something to drink as pay. If they don't show up, no one misses them."
"Good. Now-how long are the days here? Is it twentyfour hours from now until tomorrow morning at this time?"
Ted seemed interested in the question and considered it for several moments before replying. "Call it twenty-five," he said.
"Maybe a litde longer. Because time is slowing down, at least here. As the Beams weaken, there seems to be a growing disparity in the time-flow between the worlds. It's probably one of the major stress points."
Roland nodded. Susannah offered him food and he shook his head with a word of thanks. Behind them, the Rod was sitting on a crate, looking down at his bare and sore-covered feet.
Eddie was surprised to see Oy approach the fellow, and more surprised still when the bumbler allowed Chucky (or Haylis) to stroke his head with one misshapen claw of a hand.
"And is there a time of morning when things down there might be a little less... I don't know..."
"A little disorganized?" Ted suggested.
Roland nodded.
"Did you hear a horn a little while ago?" Ted asked. "Just before we showed up?"
They all shook their heads.
Ted didn't seem surprised. "But you heard the music start, correct?"
"Yes," Susannah said, and offered Ted a fresh can of Nozz-ALa.
He took it and drank with gusto. Eddie tried not to shudder.
"Thank you, ma'am. In any case, the horn signals the change of shifts. The music starts then."
"I hate that music," Dinky said moodily.
"If there's any time when control wavers," Ted went on,
"that would be it."
"And what o'clock is that?" Roland asked.
Ted and Dinky exchanged a doubtful glance. Dinky showed eight fingers, his eyebrows raised questioningly. He looked relieved when Ted nodded at once.
"Yes, eight o'clock," Ted said, then laughed and gave his head a cynical little shake. "What would be eight, anyway, in a world where yon prison might always lie firmly east and not east by southeast on some days and dead east on others."
But Roland had been living with the dissolving world long before Ted Brautigan had even dreamed of such a place as Algul Siento, and he wasn't particularly upset by the way formerly hard-and-fast facts of life had begun to bend. "About twenty-five hours from right now," Roland said. "Or a little less."
Dinky nodded. "But if you're counting on raging confusion, forget it. They know their places and go to them. They're old hands."
"Still," Roland said, "it's the best we're apt to do." Now he looked at his old acquaintance from Mejis. And beckoned to him.
FIVE
Sheemie set his plate down at once, came to Roland, and made a fist. "Hile, Roland, Will Dearborn that was."
Roland returned this greeting, then turned to Jake. The boy gave him an uncertain look. Roland nodded at him, and Jake came. Now Jake and Sheemie stood facing each other with Roland hunkered between them, seeming to look at neither now that they were brought together.
Jake raised a hand to his forehead.
Sheemie returned the gesture.
Jake looked down at Roland and said, "What do you want?"
Roland didn't answer, only continued to look serenely toward the mouth of the cave, as if there were something in the apparently endless murk out there which interested him. And Jake knew what was wanted, as surely as if he had used the touch on Roland's mind to find out (which he most certainly had not).
They had come to a fork in the road. It had been Jake who'd suggested Sheemie should be the one to tell them which branch to take. At the time it had seemed like a weirdly good idea-who knew why. Now, looking into that earnest, not-very-bright face and those bloodshot eyes, Jake wondered two things: what had ever possessed him to suggest such a course of action, and why someone-probably Eddie, who retained a relatively hard head in spite of all they'd been through-hadn't told him, kindly but firmly, that putting their future in Sheemie hands was a dumb idea. Totally noodgy, as his old schoolmates back at Piper might have said. Now Roland, who believed that even in the shadow of death there were still lessons to be learned, wanted Jake to