He lifted the bike, swung it around, and rolled it to the edge of the display space. Bill laid hold of the handlebars to help him, and as he did another shudder whipped through him. Silver. Again. It was Silver in his hands and

(he thrusts his fists against the posts and still insists he sees the ghosts)

he had to force the thought away because it made him feel faint and strange.

"That back tire's a little soft," the proprietor said (it was, in fact, as flat as a pancake). The front tire was up, but so bald the cord was showing through in places.

"No problem," Bill said.

"You can handle it from here?"

(I used to be able to handle it just fine; now I don't know)

"I guess so," Bill said. "Thanks."

"Sure. And if you want to talk about that barber pole, come back."

The proprietor held the door for him. Bill walked the bike out, turned left, and started toward Main Street. People glanced with amusement and curiosity at the man with the bald head pushing the huge bike with the flat rear tire and the oogah-horn protruding over the rusty bike-basket, but Bill hardly noticed them. He was marvelling at how well his grownup hands still fitted the rubber handgrips, was remembering how he had always meant to knot some thin strips of plastic, different colors, into the holes in each grip so they would flutter in the wind. He had never gotten around to that.

He stopped at the corner of Center and Main, outside of Mr Paperback. He leaned the bike against the building long enough to strip off his sportcoat. Pushing a bike with a flat tire was hard work, and the afternoon had come off hot. He tossed the coat into the basket and went on.

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Chain's rusty, he thought. Whoever had it didn't take very good care of

(him)

it.

He stopped for a moment, frowning, trying to remember just what had happened to Silver. Had he sold it? Given it away? Lost it, perhaps? He couldn't remember. Instead, that idiotic sentence

(his fists against the posts and still insists)

resurfaced, as strange and out of place as an easy chair on a battlefield, a record-player in a fireplace, a row of pencils protruding from a cement sidewalk.

Bill shook his head. The sentence broke up and dispersed like smoke. He pushed Silver on to Mike's place.

6

MIKE HANLON MAKES A CONNECTION

But first he made supper-hamburgers with sauteed mushrooms and onions and a spinach salad. They had finished working on Silver by then and were more than ready to eat.

The house was a neat little Cape Cod, white with green trim. Mike had just been arriving when Bill pushed Silver up Palmer Lane. He was behind the wheel of an old Ford with rusty rocker panels and a cracked rear window, and Bill remembered the fact Mike had so quietly pointed out: the six members of the Losers" Club who left Derry had quit being losers. Mike had stayed behind and was still behind.

Bill rolled Silver into Mike's garage, which was floored with oiled dirt and was every bit as neat as the house proved to be. Tools hung from pegs, and the lights, shielded with tin cones, looked like the lights which hang over pool tables. Bill leaned the bike against the wall. The two of them looked at it without speaking for a bit, hands in pockets.

"It's Silver, all right," Mike said at last. "I thought you might have been wrong. But it's him. What are you going to do with him?"

"Fucked if I know. Have you got a bicycle pump?"

"Yeah. I think I've got a tire-patching kit, too. Are those tubeless tires?"

"They always were." Bill bent down to look at the flat tire. "Yeah. Tubeless."

"Getting ready to ride it again?"

"Of c-course not," Bill said sharply. "I just don't like to see it si-hi-hitting there on a flat."

"Whatever you say, Big Bill. You're the boss."

Bill looked around sharply at that, but Mike had gone to the garage's back wall and was taking down a tire-pump. He got a tin tire-patching kit from one of the cabinets and handed it to Bill, who looked at it curiously. It was as he remembered such things from his childhood: a small tin box of about the same size and shape as those kept by men who roll their own cigarettes, except the top was bright and pebbled-you used it for roughing the rubber around the hole before you put on the patch. The box looked brand-new, and there was a Woolco price sticker on it that said $7.23. It seemed to him that when he was a kid such a kit had gone for about a buck-twenty-five.

"You didn't just have this hanging around," Bill said. It wasn't a question.

"No," Mike agreed. "I bought it last week. Out at the mall, as a matter of fact.'

"You've got a bike of your own?"

"No," Mike said, meeting his eyes.

"You just happened to buy this kit."

"Just got the urge," Mike agreed, his eyes still on Bill's. "Woke up thinking it might come in handy. The thought kept coming back all day. So... I got the kit. And here you are to use it."

"Here I am to use it," Bill agreed. "But like they say on the soaps, what does it all mean, dear?"

"Ask the others," Mike said. "Tonight."

"Will they all be there, do you think?"

"I don't know, Big Bill." He paused and added: "I think there's a chance that all of them won't be. One or two of them may decide to just creep out of town. Or... "He shrugged.

"What do we do if that happens?"

"I don't know." Mike pointed to the tire-patching kit. "I paid seven bucks for that thing. Are you going to do something with it or just look at it?"

Bill took his sportcoat out of the basket and hung it carefully on an unoccupied wallpeg. Then he turned Silver upside down so that he rested on his seat and began to carefully rotate the rear tire. He didn't like the rusty way the axle squeaked, and remembered the almost silent click of the ball-bearings in the kid's skateboard. A little 3-in-1 oil would fix that right up, he thought.

Wouldn't hurt to oil the chain, either. It's rusty as hell... And playing cards. It needs playing cards on the spokes. Mike would have cards, I bet. The good ones. Bikes, with the celluloid coating that made them so stiff and so slippery that the first time you tried to shuffle them they always sprayed all over the floor. Playing cards, sure, and clothespins to hold them -

He stopped, suddenly cold.

What in the name of Jesus are you thinking of?

"Something wrong, Bill?" Mike asked softly.

"Nothing." His fingers touched something small and round and hard. He got his nails under it and pulled. A small tack came out of the tire. "Here's the cuh-cuh-culprit," he said, and it rose in his mind again, strange, unbidden, and powerful: He thrusts his fists against the posts and still insists he sees the ghosts. But this time the voice, his voice, was followed by his mother's voice, saying: Try again, Billy. You almost had it that time. And Andy Devine as Guy Madison's sidekick Jingles yelling, Hey, Wild Bill, wait for me!

He shivered.

(the posts)

He shook his head. I couldn't say that without stuttering even now, he thought, and for just a moment he felt that he was on the edge of understanding it all.

Then it was gone.

He opened the tire-patching kit and went to work. It took a long time to get it just right. Mike leaned against the wall in a bar of late-afternoon sun, the sleeves of his shirt rolled up and his tie yanked down, whistling a tune which Bill finally identified as "she Blinded Me with Science."

While he waited for the tire cement to set, Bill had-just for something to do, he told himself-oiled Silver's chain, sprocket, and axles. It didn't make the bike look any better, but when he spun the tires he found that the squeak was gone, and that was satisfying. Silver never would have won any beauty-contests anyway. His one virtue was that he could go like a blue streak.

By that tune, five-thirty in the afternoon, he had nearly forgotten Mike was there; he had become completely absorbed in small yet utterly satisfying acts of maintenance. He screwed the nozzle of the pump onto the rear tire's valve and watched the tire fatten, shooting for the right pressure by guess and by gosh. He was pleased to see that the patch was holding nicely.

When he thought he had it right, he unscrewed the pump-nozzle and was about to turn Silver over when he heard the rapid snap-flutter of playing cards behind him. He whirled, almost knocking Silver over.

Mike was standing there with a deck of blue-backed Bicycle playing cards in one hand. "Want these?"

Bill let out a long, shaky sigh. "You've got clothespins, too, I suppose?"

Mike took four from the flap pocket of his shirt and held them out.

"Just happened to have them around, I suh-huppose?"

"Yeah, something like that," Mike said.

Bill took the cards and tried to shuffle them. His hands shook and the cards sprayed out of his hands. They went everywhere.,. but only two landed face-up. Bill looked at them, then up at Mike. Mike's gaze was frozen on the littered playing cards. His lips had pulled back from his teeth.

The two up cards were both the ace of spades.

"That's impossible," Mike said. "I just opened that deck. Look." He pointed at the swill-can just inside the garage door and Bill saw the cellophane wrapper, "How can one deck of cards have two aces of spades?"

Bill bent down and picked them up. "How can you spray a deck of cards all over the floor and have only two of them land face up?" he asked. "That's an even better que-"

He turned the aces over, looked, and then showed them to Mike. One of them was a blueback, the other a redback.

"Holy Christ, Mikey, what have you got us into?"

"What are you going to do with those?" Mike asked in a numb voice.

"Why, put them on," Bill said, and suddenly he began to laugh. "That's what I'm supposed to do, isn't it? If there are certain preconditions for the use of magic, those preconditions will inevitably arrange themselves. Right?"

Mike didn't reply. He watched as Bill went to Silver's rear wheel and attached the playing cards. His hands were still shaking and it took awhile, but he finally got it done, drew in one tight breath, held it, and spun the rear wheel. The playing cards machine-gunned loudly against the spokes in the garage's silence.

"Come on," Mike said softly. "Come on in, Big Bill. I'll make us some chow."

They had scoffed the burgers and now sat smoking, watching dark begin to unfold from dusk in Mike's back yard. Bill took out his wallet, found someone's business card, and wrote upon it the sentence that had plagued him ever since he had seen Silver in the window of Secondhand Rose, Secondhand Clothes. He showed it to Mike, who read it carefully, lips pursed.

"Does it mean anything to you?" Bill asked.

"He thrusts his fists against the posts and still insists he sees the ghosts." He nodded. "Yes, I know what that is."

"Well then, tell me. Or are you going to give me some more cuh-cuh-crap about figuring it out for myself?"

"No," Mike said, "in this case I think it's okay to tell you. The phrase goes back to English times. It's a tongue-twister that became a speech exercise for lispers and stutterers. Your mother kept trying to get you to say it that summer. The summer of 1958. You used to go around mumbling it to yourself."

"I did?" Bill said, and then, slowly, answering his own question: "I did."

"You must have wanted to please her very much."

Bill, who suddenly felt he might cry, only nodded. He didn't trust himself to speak.

"You never made it," Mike told him. "I remember that. You tried like hell but your tang kept getting all tungled up."

"But I did say it," Bill replied. "At least once."

"When?"

Bill brought his fist down on the picnic table hard enough to hurt. "I don't remember!" he shouted. And then, dully, he said it again: "I just don't remember."

Chapter 12 THREE UNINVITED GUESTS

1

On the day after Mike Hanlon made his calls, Henry Bowers began to hear voices. Voices had been talking to him all day long. For awhile, Henry thought they were coming from the moon. In the late afternoon, looking up from where he was hoeing in the garden, he could see the moon in the blue daytime sky, pale and small. A ghost-moon.

That, in fact, was why he believed it was the moon that was talking to him. Only a ghost-moon would talk in ghost-voices-the voices of his old friends, and the voices of those little kids who had played down in the Barrens so long ago. Those, and another voice... one he did not dare name.

Victor Criss spoke from the moon first. They comin back, Henry. All of em, man. They comin back to Derry.

Then Belch Huggins spoke from the moon, perhaps from the dark side of the moon. You're the only one, Henry. The only one of us left. You'll have to get em for me and Vie. Ain't no little kids can rank us out like that. Why, I hit a ball one time down to Tracker's, and Tony Tracker said that ball would have been out of Yankee Stadium.

He hoed, looking up at the ghost-moon in the sky, and after awhile Fogarty came over and hit him in the back of the neck and knocked him flat on his face.

"You're hoein up the peas right along with the weeds, you ijit."

Henry got up, brushing dirt off his face and out of his hair. There stood Fogarty, a big man in a white jacket and white pants, his belly swelled out in front of him. It was illegal for the guards (who were called "counsellors" here at Juniper Hill) to carry billyclubs, so a number of them-Fogarty, Adler, and Koontz were the worst-carried rolls of quarters in their pockets. They almost always hit you with them in the same place, right in the back of the neck. There was no rule against quarters. Quarters were not considered a deadly weapon at Juniper Hill, an institution for the mentally insane which stood on the outskirts of Augusta near the Sidney town line.

"I'm sorry, Mr Fogarty," Henry said, and offered a big grin which showed an irregular line of yellow teeth. They looked like the pickets in a fence outside a haunted house. Henry had begun to lose his teeth when he was fourteen or so.

"Yeah, you're sorry," Fogarty said. "You'll be a lot sorrier if I catch you doing it again, Henry."

"Yes sir, Mr Fogarty."

Fogarty walked away, his black shoes leaving big brown tracks in the dirt of West Garden. Because Fogarty's back was turned, Henry took a moment to look around surreptitiously. They had been shooed out to hoe as soon as the clouds cleared, everyone from the Blue Ward-which was where they put you if you had once been very dangerous but were now considered only moderately dangerous. Actually, all the patients at Juniper Hill were considered moderately dangerous; it was a facility for the criminally insane. Henry Bowers was here because he had been convicted of killing his father in the late fall of 1958-it had been a famous year for murder trials, all right; when it came to murder trials, 1958 had been a pip.




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