“No,” Roland said. “Not this time, not ever again.” But in the deep-est darkness of his heart, he thought of the Tower and wondered.
THE HAIL CHANGED TO a hard, driving rain, but Eddie could see gleams of blue sky behind the unravelling clouds in the north. The storm was going to end soon, but in the meantime, they were going to get drenched. He found he didn’t mind. He could not remember when he had felt so calm, so at peace with himself, so utterly drained. This mad adven-ture wasn’t over yet—he suspected, in fact, that it had barely begun— but today they had won a big one. “Su/e?” He pushed her hair away from her face and looked into her dark eyes. “Are you okay? Did it hurt you?”
“Hurt me a little, but I’m okay. I think that bitch Detta Walker is still the undefeated Roadhouse Champeen, demon or no demon.” “What’s that mean?”
She grinned impishly. “Not much, not anymore . . . thank God. How about you, Eddie? All right?”
Eddie listened for Henry’s voice and didn’t hear it. He had an idea that Henry’s voice might be gone for good. “Even better than that,” he said, and, laughing, folded her into his arms again. Over her shoulder he could see what was left of the door: only a few faint lines and angles. Soon the rain would wash those away, too.
“WHAT’s YOUR NAME?” JAKE asked the woman whose legs stopped just above the knee. He was suddenly aware that he had lost his pants in his struggle to escape the doorkeeper, and he pulled the tail of his shirt down over his underwear. There wasn’t very much left of her dress, either, as far as that went.
“Susannah Dean,” she said. “I already know your name.”
“Susannah,” Jake said thoughtfully. “I don’t suppose your father owns a railroad company, does he?”
She looked astonished for a moment, then threw her head back and laughed. “Why, no, sugar! He was a dentist who went and invented a few things and got rich. What makes you ask a thing like that?”
Jake didn’t answer. He had turned his attention to Eddie. The terror had already left his face, and his eyes had regained that cool, assessing look which Roland remembered so well from the way station. “Hi, Jake,” Eddie said. “Good to see you, man.” “Hi,” Jake said. “I met you earlier today, but you were a lot younger then.” “I was a lot younger ten minutes ago. Are you okay?” “Yes,” Jake said. “Some scratches, that’s all.” He looked around. “You haven’t found the train yet.” This was not a question. Eddie and Susannah exchanged puzzled looks, but Roland only shook his head. “No train.”
“Are your voices gone?”
Roland nodded. “All gone. Yours?”
“Gone. I’m all together again. We both are.” They looked at the same instant, with the same impulse. As Roland swept Jake into his arms, the boy’s unnatural self-possession broke and he began to cry—it was the exhausted, relieved weeping of a child who has been lost long, suffered much, and is finally safe again. As Roland’s arms closed about his waist, Jake’s own arms slipped about the gunslinger’s neck and gripped like hoops of steel. “I’ll never leave you again,” Roland said, and now his own tears came. “I swear to you on the names of all my fathers: I’ll never leave you again.” Yet his heart, that silent, watchful, lifelong prisoner of ka, received the words of this promise not just with wonder but with doubt. BOOK TWO
LUD A HEAP OF BROKEN IMAGES
IV
TOWN AND KA-TET
FOUR DAYS AFTER EDDIE had yanked him through the doorway between worlds, minus his original pair of pants and his sneakers but still in possession of his pack and his life, Jake awoke with something warm and wet nuzzling at his face. If he had come around to such a sensation on any of the three previous mornings, he undoubtedly would have wakened his companions with his screams, for he had been feverish and his sleep had been haunted by nightmares of the plaster-man. In these dreams his pants did not slide free, the doorkeeper kept its grip, and it tucked him into its unspeakable mouth, where its teeth came down like the bars guarding a castle keep. Jake awoke from these dreams shuddering and moaning helplessly.
The fever had been caused by the spider-bite on the back of his neck. When Roland examined it on the second day and found it worse instead of better, he had conferred briefly with Eddie and had then given Jake a pink pill. “You’ll want to take four of these every day for at least a week,” he said. Jake had gazed at it doubtfully. “What is it?” “Cheflet,” Roland said, then looked disgustedly at Eddie. “You tell him. I still can’t say it.”