Sometimes, for a minute or two after awakening, before he’d yet opened his eyes, the kindly illusion would prolong itself. Sure, on the other side of those closed lids was Baltimore. All he’d have to do was raise them, and—
And then his eyes would open, and he would be back in the greenish pallor of the dungeon around him. Inert on the floor, being punished for no reason, just for the sake of being punished. The tribal morality of the dim dead past.
The dream was in the waking and the waking was in the dream.
It wasn’t the darkness of the dungeon. He could have borne that. It wasn’t the fact of being fettered. He could have borne that. Devil’s Island or Alcatraz, it wouldn’t have mattered. It was the fact that outside the dungeon was a greater dungeon, over and above the immediate shackles on his wrist were vaster shackles. He was imprisoned in the wrong age.
He had suffered a solitary fate, which had never befallen another individual, which was too cruel almost to be borne. He used to wonder sometimes, in wry retrospect, if all the thousands of lads who, as they turned the pages of a history book or adventure tale, had fleetingly wished themselves back in some former, more glamorous time, would have still wished that if they’d known what it felt like as he did now. The sense of cosmic loneliness, greater than any marooned sailor ever felt on a desert island. For loneliness was not just lengthwise now, a matter of distance. It was on a more imponderable plane, a matter of time.
Yes, many times he cried, softly, to himself, deep in the night, where pain would not have made him cry, nor even excess of fear. But strangeness did; the lack of explanation, the withholding of reasonable understanding. Strangeness broke him down and shattered his restraint and courage to pieces, and he’d press his hands flat against his face to keep from hearing himself, and press his face in turn flat against the ground or against the wall, and breathe harshly and wetly into that self-imposed mask over his own weeping, till his sides ached and his teeth chattered and his throat was torn with the rebuffed breath. But the answer never came. Strangeness, things without explanation. Strangeness, taking away all props. For what is courage, after all, but a reliance on the things that one knows, the things one is sure of?
But this was only sometimes. Then there were the nights he lay in sullen rage, planning plans that never came to anything. And there were the nights when he lay in dulled listlessness, not caring much. And more and more, increasing while the others diminished, there were the nights when he just slept, and dreamed of the past that was the future. Six months ago, but still five hundred years ahead of the present he was in now.
Then one night he dreamed he heard Chris speaking to him in the dark, back at the finca. He couldn’t see her but he knew it was her voice. She was saying his name in the dark and afraid to make much noise. She couldn’t seem to come to him, she was on the outside of some doorway or opening and he was on the inside, but he could hear her cautiously breathing his name. It was the slenderest sort of whisper, the merest skein of sibilant sound, repeated over and over, patiently thrown into the dark at him as one throws particles of gravel against a window pane until at last one of them succeeds in attracting the attention of someone behind it.
“Larry.” And then, “Larry.” And then, “Larry.”
Just breaths of silkiness in the darkness of the night.
His head rolled over, and he slurred sleepily, “Be there right away, just wait a minute.”
The sound of his own voice completed his awakening. A hissed warning to silence came, like something left over from the dream, that had escaped out of it. “Sh-h-h-h.”
He lay there for a minute with his eyes still closed. He’d never dreamed of her yet. Only of Mitty, and once or twice of another girl from long ago, Jane Abbott. But never of this kid, whom he’d only half noted in the gathering clouds of strangeness those last few weeks down at La Escondida.
“Larry.”
The whisper was still sounding, and yet the dream was over. He reared upright, pushed himself away from the wall in a sitting position.
“Larry.”
He struggled to his feet, sawed the darkness around with his free arm, trying to split it into sections. “Chris! Are you in here with me?”
“No, I’m in the inside passage, up against the cell door. I’m right by the opening in it.” Then, as the metal hoop gave a flexing creak with his attempt to draw away from it, she said, “Sh-h.”
“Where’s the guard? Isn’t he there by you?”
“He sleeps on the ground, outside in the open, right at the mouth of the passage. I had to — I had to step over him to get in here. I’ll have to go back that way too, across his body.”
He strained toward her at an angle, swaying off balance.
“I’m holding my arm all the way in through the opening,” she whispered. “Are you near enough? Reach out, reach out and see if you can touch it.”
He kept fanning the blackness with his unfettered arm.
“I’ve got something for you. I’m holding it. I’m afraid to drop it, he may hear.”
Suddenly his splaying fingers touched something cold, the handle of an obsidian knife that she was swaying back and forth as sightlessly as he. A shudder of deep emotion ran through the two of them at the slight contact, the first friendly contact in months. His hands tightened on the knife and he took it from her. It was short, but it had provided the necessary extra length that just spanned the distance between them.
“Is it any good? Will it help you?”
“Will it?” he breathed with hot gratitude. “The hoop’s metal, but my hand’s attached to it with some sort of a thong or fiber. I can saw through that.”
“I’ve had it on me for over a week. I’ve been trying to steal out every night to get to you with it. This was the first chance I had. Use it a little at a time. Free yourself from the wall first. Then later you can begin digging at this wooden barrier. Don’t try to do it all in one night; you’ll only be caught at it. I’ve got to go back now.”
“Wait, Chris,” he pleaded. “Don’t leave me yet. Let me talk to you just a minute more. It feels so good to talk to someone again.”
“I’ll come tomorrow night. If I stay too long tonight, then I may never come again. I only have to be caught at this once, you know. She doesn’t know what mercy is.”
He hardly knew what he was saying; it was like a form of delirium. “Say some more. Say anything. Let me hear the words. I don’t care what they are. Oh, I’m so lonely it hurts.”
“I’m afraid to stay too long. My place is on the floor right beside her. She may wake any minute and find me gone. There’s a long flight of steps up into the temple, too. I carried down an empty water jug and left it standing there as an excuse. Tomorrow night. Will you be careful?”
“I’ll be careful.”
“Tomorrow night.”
There was the slight rustle of her garb, out there in the gloom, and then he didn’t hear her any more. He counted, with his heart, the steps that would take her back to the outside of the passage, and lift her across the recumbent guard. He lived that awful moment with her as she passed through it, his ears straining against the thick walls that still would not have kept out the disastrous sounds. A sleepy grunt, a growl of interrogation — and catastrophe.
But nothing came. The minute became another minute, the other minute became a third. She’d made it, she was safe. The night was still and empty.
He corkscrewed around on his hips, inward toward the wall, and began sawing away briskly at the thong that held him to the hoop.