Damnation alley, p.14
Damnation Alley,
p.14
He dropped three of them, then got to his feet and scrambled, firing from the hip.
He made it behind Big Brother's fallen bike and fired from there. Big Brother was still fallen, too. When the rifle was empty, he didn't have time to reload. He fired the .45 four times before a tire chain brought him down.
He awoke to the roaring of the engines. They were circling him. When he got to his feet, a handlebar knocked him down again.
Two bikes were moving about him, and there were many dead people upon the road.
He struggled to rise again, was knocked off his feet.
Big Brother rode one of the bikes, and a guy he hadn't seen rode the other.
He crawled to the right, and there was pain in his fingertips as the tires passed over them.
But he saw a rock and waited till a driver was near. Then he stood again and threw himself upon the man as he passed, the rock he had seized rising and falling, once, in his right hand. He was carried along as this occurred, and as he fell he felt the second bike strike him.
There were terrible pains in his side, and his body felt broken, but he reached out even as this occurred and caught hold of a strut on the side of the bike, and was dragged along by it.
Before he had been dragged ten feet, he had drawn his SS dagger from his boot. He struck upward and felt a thin metal wall give way. Then his hands came loose, and he fell, and he smelled the gasoline. His hand dived into his jacket pocket and came out with the Zippo.
He had struck the tank on the side of Big Brother's bike, and it jetted forth its contents on the road. Thirty feet ahead, Big Brother was turning.
Tanner held the lighter, the lighter with the raised skull of enamel, wings at its back. His thumb spun the wheel, and the sparks leaped forth, then the flame. He tossed it into the stream of gasoline that lay before him, and the flames raced away, tracing a blazing trail upon the concrete.
Big Brother had turned and was bearing down upon him when he saw what had happened. His eyes widened, and his red-framed smile went away.
He tried to leap off his bike, but it was too late.
The exploding gas tank caught him, and he went down with a piece of metal in his head and other pieces elsewhere.
Flames splashed over Tanner, and he beat at them feebly with his hands.
He raised his head above the blazing carnage and let it fall again. He was bloody and weak and so very tired. He saw his own machine, standing still undamaged on the road ahead.
He began crawling toward it.
When he reached it, he threw himself across the saddle and lay there for perhaps ten minutes. He vomited twice, and his pains became a steady pulsing.
After perhaps an hour he mounted the bike and brought it to life.
He rode for half a mile, and then the dizziness and the fatigue hit him.
He pulled off to the side of the road and concealed his bike as best he could. Then he lay down upon the bare earth and slept.
Within the theater Agony on the stage of Delirium in the heat-lightning lit landscape of Night and Dream there go upon the boards the memories that never were, compounded of that which was and that which is not, that which is and that which can never be, informed with fleeting or lingering passions, sexless or sexful, profound or absurd, seldom remembered, sometimes coherent, beautiful, ugly, or mundane upon experience, generally inane in reflection, strangely sad or happy, colorfully dark or darkly light, and this is about all that can be said of them, save that the spark which ignites them, too, is unknown.
A man in black moves along a broken roadway beneath a dimly glowing sky.
I am Father Dearth, a priest out of Albany, he seems to say, making my pilgrimage to the cathedral in Boston, going down to Boston to pray for the salvation of man. Over the mountains, down the Alley, by a foam-flecked stream, past the blazing mountain and over the swaying bridges, heavily my footfall rings. In this wood beside the road, there will I await the dawn, there where the dew lies thick.
There comes a sound, as of the steady rumble of an engine, but it neither rises nor diminishes in volume. Then to it is added the sound as of one striking upon a fender with a stone at five-second intervals. This continues.
Another approaches the wood, dressed all in gray and wearing a red mask with concentric circles about the eyeholes, a thin line for a mouth, sunken cheeks, and three dark V's in the center of the forehead.
I would speak to you, priest, he seems to say, coming to stand beside the other.
What is it you would say?
There is a man for whom I would beg you pray.
This is my part. For whom shall I pray?
There is no need to know his name. He lies far from here. He is buried in another land.
How can I pray for him if I do not know his name?
Pray, nevertheless. All creatures shall be profited without distinction.
This I cannot do.
And between the steady beats and within the rumble, the measured words are made, saying, Pray, though the heart that prays marks with no name the prayer, yet he that takes it is its owner.
Then come with me to my home and pass the night there, priest.
He raises a branch, and there is a doorway.
What is this place? A shrine, of sorts? It seems like the inside of a car, only much larger.
It is.
The one in the mask seats himself before the wheel 'and places his hands upon it. He stares forward then and does not move.
Who are you?
It does not matter. I drive.
Where? Why? What is the reason for this?
You must know that when I put forth upon my mission I did not want to die. I was afraid, but I drove. Past, over, through all things that stood in my way I drove, and the bolts out of the heavens fell about me, driving, and the sleep piled up behind my eyes after my comrade died, and I fought it with drugs and my will, knowing as I drove that the invisible fires of radiation burned my body, coming from beyond my damaged shield. Driving, I became a part of the car, and it of me, so that we were one with our mission. I am wounded again and again now with this fire, and my head grows more heavy.
Slowly, he lowers his head to the wheel and rests it there, unmoving.
Swiftly, swiftly coming and swiftly going, coming and going. One night, 'two nights, three nights. I carved my tracks upon the Alley, my eyes dazzled and a madness possessing me. My wounds are upon me, and there is no end to the road I drive.
He raises his head once more.
They kill me, the monsters in the land and the sky. They kill me. Driving, driving, I reach my destination, deliver my message, sicken, and die.
But I must have done, or dawn will find me talking still. Go to your rest through yonder door.
He rises and departs the car, and the priest passes through the doorway, to stand in the grove once more, for the car has vanished, though the sound of the engine continues undiminished and the steady beat does not wane.
I have seen strange things. I cannot sleep. I will pray.
The priest bows his head and stands motionless for a time.
The one in the mask appears once more, with a bandage about his head.
The winds are rising, he seems to say, the clouds shift, and the night is dark. A wild wind combs the wood beneath this hill. The branches heave. The moon does not rise till dawn, and then she will be invisible. There is no quietness, nor is there rest.
Say your name.
The man raises one hand to his mask and covers it over. He turns away his head.
Brady. Give me rest.
Then the mask and the bandage drop to the ground, and the gray garment collapses upon them, as day begins faintly in the east.
The words are made within the rumble and the beats: He was wounded, until the strength of his spirit weakened, like the dew that even now fades.
A cock is crowing, and a whiteness begins in the sky. He has hidden under the shadow of the trees; under the shadow of the trees has he hidden himself.
The dream is vanished now; where to, too, is not known.
When he awoke, he felt dried blood upon his side. His left hand ached and was swollen. All four fingers felt stiff, and it hurt to try to bend them. His head throbbed, and there was a taste of gasoline within his mouth. He was too sore to move for a long while. His beard had been singed, and his right eye was swollen almost shut.
"Corny..." he said; then, "Damn!"
Everything came back, like the contents of a powerful dream suddenly spilled into his consciousness.
He began to shiver, and there were mists all around him. It was very dark, and his legs were cold; the dampness had soaked completely through his denims.
In the distance, he heard a vehicle pass. It sounded like a car.
He managed to roll over, and he rested his head on his forearm. It seemed to be night, but it could be a black day.
As he lay there, his mind went back to his prison cell. It seemed almost a haven now; and he thought of his brother, Denny, who must also be hurting at this moment. He wondered if he had any cracked ribs himself. It felt like it. And he thought of the monsters of the southwest, and of dark-eyed Greg, who had tried to chicken out. Was he still living? His mind circled back to L.A. and the old Coast, gone, gone forever now, after the Big Raid. Then Corny walked past him, blood upon her breasts, and he chewed his beard and held his eyes shut very tight. They might have made it together in Boston. How far, now?
He got to his knees and crawled until he felt something high and solid. A tree. He sat with his back to it, and his hand sought the crumpled cigarette pack within his jacket. He drew one forth, smoothed it, then remembered that his lighter lay somewhere back on the highway. He sought through his pockets and found a damp matchbook. The third one lit. The chill went out of his bones as he smoked, and a wave of fever swept over him. He coughed as he was unbuttoning his collar, and it seemed that he tasted blood.
His weapons were gone, save for the lump of a single grenade at his belt.
Above him, in the darkness, he heard the roaring. After six puffs, the cigarette slipped from his fingers and sizzled out upon the damp mold. His head fell forward, and there was darkness within.
There might have been a storm. He didn't remember. When he awoke, he was lying on his right side, the tree to his back. A pink afternoon sun shone down upon him, and the mists were blown away. From somewhere he heard the sound of a bird. He managed a curse, then realized how dry his throat was. He was suddenly burned with a terrible thirst.
There was a clear puddle about thirty feet away. He crawled to it and drank his fill. It grew muddy as he did so.
Then he crawled to where his bike lay hidden, and stood beside it. He managed to seat himself upon it, and his hands shook as he lit a cigarette.
It must have taken him an hour to reach the roadway, and he was panting heavily by then. His watch had been broken, so he didn't know the hour. The sun was already lowering at his back when he started out. The winds whipped about him, insulating his consciousness within their burning flow. His cargo rode securely behind him. He had visions of someone opening it and finding a batch of broken bottles. He laughed and cursed, alternately.
Several cars passed him, heading in the other direction. He had not seen any heading toward the city. The road was in good condition, and he began to pass buildings that seemed in a good state of repair, though deserted. He did not stop. This time he determined not to stop for anything, unless he was stopped.
The sun fell farther, and the sky dimmed before him. There were two black lines swaying in the heavens. Then he passed a sign that told him he had eighteen miles farther to go. Ten minutes later he switched on his light.
Then he topped a hill and slowed before he began its descent.
There were lights below him and in the distance.
As he rushed forward, the winds brought to him the sound of a single bell, tolling over and over within the gathering dark. He sniffed a remembered thing upon the air: it was the salt tang of the sea.
The sun was hidden behind the hill as he descended, and he rode within the endless shadow. A single star appeared on the far horizon, between the two black belts.
Now there were lights within shadows that he passed, and the buildings moved closer together. He leaned heavily on the handlebars, and the muscles of his shoulders smoldered beneath his jacket. He wished that he had a crash helmet, for he felt increasingly unsteady.
He must be almost there. Where would he head, once he hit the city proper? They had not told him that.
He shook his head to clear it.
The street he drove along was deserted. There were no traffic sounds that he could hear. He blew his horn, and its echoes rolled back upon him.
There was a light on in the building to his left.
He pulled to a stop, crossed the sidewalk, and banged on the door. There was no response from within. He tried the door and found it locked. A telephone would mean he could end his trip right there.
What if they were all dead inside? The thought occurred to him that just about everybody could be dead by now. He decided to break in. He returned to his bike for a screwdriver, then went to work on the door.
He heard the gunshot and the sound of the engine at approximately the same time.
He turned around quickly, his back against the door, the hand grenade in his gloved right fist.
"Hold it!" called out a loudspeaker on the side of the black car that approached. "That shot was a warning! The next one won't be!"
Tanner raised his hands to a level with his ears, his right one turned to conceal the grenade. He stepped forward to the curb beside his bike when the car drew up.
There were two officers in the car, and the one on the passenger side held a .38 pointed at Tanner's middle.
"You're under arrest," he said. "Looting."
Tanner nodded as the man stepped out of the car. The driver came around the front of the vehicle, a pair of handcuffs in his hand.
"Looting," the man with the gun repeated. "You'll pull a real stiff sentence."
"Stick your hands out here, boy," said the second cop, and Tanner handed him the grenade pin.
The man stared at it dumbly for several seconds; then his eyes shot to Tanner's right hand.
"God! He's got a bomb!" said the man with the gun.
Tanner smiled, then, "Shut up and listen!" he said. "Or else shoot me and we'll all go together when we go. I was trying to get to a telephone. That case on the back of my bike is full of Haffikine antiserum. I brought it from L.A."
"You didn't run the Alley on that bike!"
"No, I didn't. My car is dead somewhere between here and Albany, and so are a lot of folks who tried to stop me. Now, you better take that medicine and get it where it's supposed to go in a hurry."
"You on the level, mister?"
"My hand is getting very tired. I am not in good shape." Tanner leaned on his bike. "Here."
He pulled his pardon out of his jacket and handed it to the officer with the handcuffs. "That's my pardon," he said. "It's dated just last week, and you can see it was made out in California."
The officer took the envelope and opened it. He withdrew the paper and studied it. "Looks real," he said. "So Brady made it through... ."
"He's dead," Tanner said. "Look, I'm hurtin'. Do something!"
"My God! Hold it tight! Get in the car and sit down! It'll just take a minute to get the case off, and we'll roll. We'll drive to the river, and you can throw it in. Squeeze real hard!"
They unfastened the case and put it in the back of the car. They rolled down the right-front window, and Tanner sat next to it with his arm on the outside.
The siren screamed, and the pain crept up Tanner's arm to his shoulder. It would be very easy to let go.
"Where do you keep your river?" he asked.
"Just a little farther. We'll be there in no time."
"Hurry," Tanner said.
"That's the bridge up ahead. We'll ride out onto it, and you throw it off, as far out as you can."
"Man, I'm tired! I'm not sure I can make it... ."
"Hurry, Jerry!"
"I am, damn it! We ain't got wings!"
"I feel kind of dizzy, too... ."
They tore out onto the bridge, and the tires screeched as they halted. Tanner opened the door slowly. The driver's had already slammed shut.
He staggered, and they helped him to the railing. He sagged against it when they released him.
"I don't think I..."
Then he straightened, drew back his arm, and hurled the grenade far out over the waters.
He grinned, and the explosion followed, far beneath them, and for a time the waters were troubled.
The two officers sighed, and Tanner chuckled.
"I'm really okay," he said. "I just faked it to bug you."
"Why you…!"
Then he collapsed, and they saw the pallor of his face within the beams of their lights.
The following spring, on the day of its unveiling in Boston Common, when it was discovered that someone had scrawled obscene words on the statue of Hell Tanner, no one thought to 'ask the logical candidate why he had done it, and the next day it was too late, because he had cut out without leaving a forwarding address. Several cars were reported stolen that day, and one was never seen again in Boston.
So they reveiled his statue, bigger than life, astride a great bronze Harley, and they cleaned him up for hopedfor posterity. But coming upon the Common, the winds still break about him, and the heavens still throw garbage.
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