“Sure this is the mezzanine?”
“The railing should be over there.”
“You been in here before?”
“Keep it down,” Denny said. “No. But I talked to somebody who has.”
“What—” Kid whispered: “What is Nightmare trying to do in here?”
Denny looked back again. “You think he knows? This is a run!”
They reached towels. By an overturned counter, they walked across mounds of terry cloth. The cool, charred dark stopped at a glass balcony rail with a brass bar. There was light up from below; leaning out (“Hey, watch it,” Denny said, “somebody might be down there.”) Kid could not see its source.
There’re people in here, Kid thought. There’re people in here, walking around, with guns. He looked over the balcony, down at counters and the paths between where grey ribbons of light lay over riotous indistinguishables.
Some one, some two scorpions ran out among them.
Denny took Kid’s shoulder.
Three more, like mazed mice, zagged through the aisles.
“Hey, what the hell do you people think you’re—” shouted by somebody who sounded like he was in a stairwell.
Five heads, deployed among lingerie and watchbands, swiveled. Two of the scorpions went on like flash bulbs—a rooster and some sort of baby dinosaur.
Kid pulled back from the light. Denny was looking up, suddenly aware that they both now had shadows swinging across the ceiling.
“Douse your God-damn lights!” which was Nightmare.
The gun-clap filled the double story. The echo settled.
Some flat reflex that held neither fear nor excitement took him back from the rail (for a moment he saw Denny’s excited, frightened face) among the dark displays. Then Denny was behind him.
“Hey, they got in! Hey, they God-damn got in—”
“Mark?” A woman. “Mark? Mark, what’s down there…”
“You get back! Did they get in? You didn’t see—”
Echo botched all meaning in a fourth, fricative voice.
Someone nearer tried to interrupt: “What are you—? Why don’t you—? Hey, look…”
“I saw their lights! For God’s sakes, I saw their lights! Somebody called out, too. I saw…”
Draped plastic dragged Kid’s shoulder. And the woman standing behind it shook the rifle at them, said, “Hhhhhhhhaaa…” and started walking backward.
Mutually, Kid thought, paralyzed with terror.
But Denny wasn’t paralyzed. He grabbed his shield projector and disappeared in light.
Neither was the woman. She staggered backward in the sudden glare and fired somewhere between them. The rifle gave a breathy crack, and Kid recognized her green dress: It was the woman, Lynn, he’d sat next to, his last visit to the Richards’. Now, squinting, and screaming, she held up the rifle to block the light. On the handle, lit by Denny’s shield, in four-color decalcomania, Red Rider smiled at Little Beaver, surrounded by a yellow lariat. The air-pump rattled. A bee-bee in the eye, he mused: And lunged.
He thought she would throw the gun at him.
But she held it, and when she didn’t let go on the second jerk (the blades of the orchid clicked on the barrel he grasped), he turned it hard and kicked her. She jerked her twisted hands away, shook them, turned. He smacked her shoulder with the rifle butt, and she dodged in darkness.
He turned, mainly to see what Denny was:
A ten-foot blob of light, colorful and disfocused, ran into itself like an amoeba erupting.
It went out, and Denny’s hand came down from his neck. Kid pushed the bee-bee gun at him. “What the hell,” he whispered, “are you supposed to be?” The fear made him laugh.
Waving the gun, they stalked through the mezzanine shadows.
“Huh?”
“Your shield.”
“Oh. About a month ago, something happened to it. I shorted something, I guess, and the projection grid—it’s plastic—melted or something. So it comes out like that. I sort of like it.”
“What did it used to be?” They turned past bolts of fabric.
Denny gave a confidential whisper. “A frog.”
With the woman, Kid thought all of a sudden, did that really happen?
People were screaming again. Below, Nightmare cried, “Hey, man, look at that!” and his excited laugh.
They went into a stairwelclass="underline" it was pitch-black. Three steps down Kid said, “Wait up—”
Half a flight down, Denny asked, “What happened?”
“My sandal strap broke. I lost my sandal.” Listening to Denny’s breathing, Kid felt around with his feet, on the step above, on the one below.
Denny suddenly stopped panting and said, “Hey, thank you.”
“I can’t find it,” Kid said. “Thanks for what?”
“I guess you saved my life.”
“Huh?”
“That woman. She would have shot me if she got a chance.”
“Oh.” Kid’s toes stubbed the wall. “It wasn’t anything. She would have shot me too.” He thought: a bee-bee gun? Fifteen-year-old Denny was very young all of a sudden. “Damn thing’s got to be around here somewhere.”
“Lemme make a light,” Denny said and made one.
Kid moved to see if his sandal was under his shadow. “Maybe it fell over…” He glanced across the banister. “Look, never mind…put that out, will you.” The luminous amoeboid collapsed. The stairwell filled up with darkness, to his eyes, and over. “Can you hear anything?”
The pulsing blot on the black said, tentatively, “No.”
“Come on then.” Kid started down.
“Okay,” was whispered in front of him.
—shot me if she got a chance: would she have if she recognized me? Or would I have wrested the rifle if I hadn’t recognized her? (He collided softly with Denny’s shoulder.) He thinks I saved his life. What—because he saw light—are they doing out there? Shoulders bumping, they walked onto the silent first floor.
Denny stepped between racks of twilit tweed and corduroy.
Kid glanced at the figure standing just beyond the doorway beside him (which was, of course, a dressing mirror, in a wooden stand, slightly tilted so that the reflected floor sloped) and—in a gym locker-room, that opened onto the field, someone had once thrown snow at his naked back.
Looking, he re-experienced (and remembered) the moment from that Vermont winter. Then forgot it, looking at the reflection, trying to recall, now that he stared for a third, a fourth, a fifth second what had struck him first. He raised his hand (the reflected hand raised), turned his head a little (the head turned a little), took a breath (the reflection breathed); he touched his vest (the reflection touched its khaki shirt), then suddenly raised his hand to knuckle his chin (the reflection’s knuckle dug into its full, black beard), and blinked (its eyes blinked behind black plastic glass frames).
The pants, he thought, the pants are the same! There was a white thread snaking across the black denim of his thigh. He (and the reflection) picked it warily away, suddenly arching his naked toes on the carpet (the tips of the black engineer boots flexed), then once more raised his hand toward the glass. He opened his fingers (reflected fingers opened): the string dropped (the string dropped).
Between gnarled knuckles and gnawed nails he looked at the smooth undersides of fingers thinner than his own. (He’s taller than I am, Kid thought inanely, taller and stockier.) He reversed his hand, to look at his own palm: the yellowed callous was lined and lined again, deep enough for scars. Between his fingers he saw the backs of fingers with only the slightest hair, only the faintest scar above the middle knuckle and a darkening at the left of the first joint. The reflection’s nails, though without moons save the thumbs, were long as his adolescent dreams, and only slightly dirty. He glanced down at the other hand. Where his was caged in blades, the reflection held—his notebook? But the correspondence (he recalled the church clock with its broken hands) was too banal for relief. Wanting to cry, he gazed full at the face, which, mirroring him twitch to twitch, for all its beard and glasses (and a small brass ring in one ear!) gazed back, with confusion, desperation, and sadness.