“You think something bad could be hiding inside me, left over from Sister Walker?” Isaiah asked, his voice quavery.
“No need to be scared, son. I’ll protect you. I’ll take it on, as if I was your daddy. Once the bad’s gone, you’ll have your gifts back, good as new, fresh as Eden. You reckon that’s all right, then? If I watch over you and promise to keep you safe like your daddy would do if he were here?”
Isaiah swallowed hard against the ballooning in his throat. Sometimes he couldn’t even remember his daddy’s face, and when that happened, it was like he was losing a part of himself, like waking from a good dream and trying desperately to go back into sleep and grab the ribbon’s end of that other world as it slips away for good. He dug his fingernails into the soft pillowing of flesh at the base of his thumb. “I reckon that’d be okay.”
“Good, good. Let’s go on up to the graveyard. Ain’t far from here.”
Isaiah led Bill the few blocks to the cemetery, where they found a mausoleum with an open door and went inside.
“Spooky in here,” Isaiah said, his voice echoing a bit in the space.
“Can’t have nobody watching us,” Bill explained. “Here. Take hold o’ my hands, now,” Bill said, and the boy laid his own palms, soft and unformed, against the rough calluses of Bill’s. “You good, little man?”
Isaiah nodded, then remembered Bill’s blindness. “Yes, sir,” he answered.
“All right, then. No tickling now. ’Cause I’m real ticklish!” Bill reached out and tickled Isaiah under the chin, making him laugh. The boy sounded happy enough. Good. Bill needed him relaxed. He took the boy’s hands again. “Let’s start easy. Gonna make a connection with me, now. You tell me if you see a lucky policy number for your old Uncle Bill, and if I win some money, I’ll buy you a new baseball. Just close your eyes.”
Isaiah took his hands away. “I’m scared.”
“Nothing to be scared of. I’ma take care of you.”
Isaiah put his hands back.
“Nice and easy now. Just a little taste…”
There was nothing but the sound of leaves skittering across the tombstones. And then, suddenly, a pull on Isaiah’s fingers, like the first nibble of a fish on a baited hook. The connection trickled up Bill’s arm, warming into a pleasant, electric buzz under the skin. The boy’s body stiffened, but his voice had the calm of a sleepwalker. “I see a house and long road. A lot of sky.”
“Yeah? You see a number, little man?” Power flowed from Isaiah’s body to Bill’s. He had to be careful not to drain the boy. He just needed a number.
“A tree.” Isaiah jerked. He sounded a little scared. “Tree.”
“You ain’t scared of no tree, is ya?” Bill said, impatient.
Isaiah twitched twice, yanking on Bill’s grip. Dammit. He couldn’t stay too much longer or he might hurt the boy. But Dutch needed Bill’s money, and that meant Bill needed a number.
“What about a number? What numbers you see?”
Isaiah’s whole body trembled. Bill could feel it traveling up his arms.
“One, four, four,” the boy said. “One, four, four,” he repeated, louder.
That couldn’t be right. One, four, four was the number Isaiah had given him the last time, and it had done very nicely for Bill. But odds weren’t good that it would be a winner again so soon. “You sure you seeing that right, little man? Look close—”
“One, four, four! One, four, four! Ghosts on the road! Gonna come for us. Ghosts on the road. Ghosts on the road, Ghosts on the road…”
God Almighty, his skin burned! The boy had a grip on him but good. Bill couldn’t break it. “I-sai-ah…” he grunted, biting down on his back teeth.
“The snake and the tree and the ghosts on the road. The man, the man, the man in the hat is coming.…”