DOWN-side. Behind that door. Right here and now!
'Wolf!' he cried, although the boys cringing in their hiding places on the first and second floors heard only a rising, triumphant howl. He raised both of the heavily muscled battering rams that had been his arms and drove them into the door. It burst open in the middle, vomiting splinters down the stairwell. Wolf drove his way through, and yes, here was the narrow place, like a throat; here was the way to the place where the White Man had told his lies while Jack and the Weaker Wolf had to sit and listen.
Jack was down there now. Wolf could smell him.
But he also smelled the White Man . . . and gunpowder.
Careful . . .
Oh yes. Wolfs knew careful. Wolfs could run and tear and kill, but when they had to be . . . Wolfs knew careful.
He went down the stairs on all fours, silent as oiled smoke, eyes as red as brake lights.
16
Gardener was becoming steadily more nervous; to Jack he looked like a man who was entering the freakout zone. His eyes moved jerkily in a triple play, from the studio where Casey was frantically listening to Jack, and then to the closed door which gave on the hall.
Most of the noises from upstairs had stopped some time ago.
Now Sonny Singer started for the door. 'I'll go up and see what's - '
'You're not going anywhere! Come back here!'
Sonny winced as if Gardener had struck him.
'What the matter, Reverend Gardener?' Jack asked. 'You look a little nervous.'
Sonny rocked him with a slap. 'You want to watch the way you talk, snotface! You just want to watch it!'
'You look nervous, too, Sonny. And you, Warwick. And Casey in there - '
'Shut him up!' Gardener suddenly screamed. 'Can't you do anything? Do I have to do everything around here myself?'
Sonny slapped Jack again, much harder. Jack's nose began to bleed, but he smiled. Wolf was very close now . . . and Wolf was being careful. Jack had begun to have a crazy hope that they might get out of this alive.
Casey suddenly straightened up and then tore the cans off his head and flicked the intercom switch.
'Reverend Gardener! I hear sirens on the outside mikes!'
Gardener's eyes, now too wide, skidded back to Casey.
'What? How many? How far away?'
'Sounds like a lot,' Casey said. 'Not close yet. But they're coming here. No doubt about that.'
Gardener's nerve broke then; Jack saw it happen. The man sat, indecisive, for a moment, and then he wiped his mouth delicately with the side of his hand.
It isn't whatever happened upstairs, not just the sirens, either. He knows that Wolf is close, too. In his own way he smells him . . . and he doesn't like it. Wolf, we might have a chance! We just might!
Gardener handed the pistol to Sonny Singer. 'I haven't time to deal with the police, or whatever mess there might be upstairs, right now,' he said. 'The important thing is Morgan Sloat. I'm going to Muncie. You and Andy are coming with me, Sonny. You keep this gun on our friend Jack here while I get the car out of the garage. When you hear the horn, come on out.'
'What about Casey?' Andy Warwick rumbled.
'Yes, yes, all right, Casey, too,' Gardener agreed at once, and Jack thought, He's running out on you, you stupid ass-holes. He's running out on you, it's so obvious that he might as well take out a billboard on the Sunset Strip and advertise the fact, and your brains are too blown to even know it. You'd go on sitting down here for ten years waiting to hear that horn blow, if the food and toilet paper held out that long.
Gardener got up. Sonny Singer, his face flushed with new importance, sat down behind his desk and pointed the gun at Jack. 'If his retarded friend shows up,' Gardener said, 'shoot him.'
'How could he show up?' Sonny asked. 'He's in the Box.'
'Never mind,' Gardener said. 'He's evil, they're both evil, it's indubitable, it's axiomatic, if the retard shows up, shoot him, shoot them both.'
He fumbled through the keys on his ring and selected one. 'When you hear the horn,' he said. He opened the door and went out. Jack strained his ears for the sound of sirens but heard nothing.
The door closed behind Sunlight Gardener.
17
Time, stretching out.
A minute that felt like two; two that felt like ten; four that felt like an hour. The three of Gardener's 'student aides' who had been left with Jack looked like boys who had been caught in a game of Statue Tag. Sonny sat bolt-upright behind Sunlight Gardener's desk - a place he both relished and coveted. The gun pointed steadily at Jack's face. Warwick stood by the door to the hall. Casey sat in the brightly lighted booth with the cans on his ears again, staring blankly out through the other glass square, into the darkness of the chapel, seeing nothing, only listening.
'He's not going to take you with him, you know,' Jack said suddenly. The sound of his voice surprised him a little. It was even and unafraid.
'Shut up, snotface,' Sonny snapped.
'Don't hold your breath until you hear him honk that horn,' Jack said. 'You'll turn pretty blue.'