E
lizabeth was dreaming with her eyes open. She was on the ship and staring at something she couldn’t quite see, but she knew it was horrible. She was in an empty compartment with hammocks hung from the walls. Without the link to the other dreamers the scene lacked detail. Some hammocks hung without support, floating in the air in defiance of gravity. Texture and color were missing, but it wasn’t the lack of detail that bothered her. There was something cold and pervasive, like the chill from a plunge in a winter lake, that caused her to shiver with dread. There was death in that room, and the man she linked with was in the middle of it.
Anita came in then, distracting her. While the scenes on the ship continued, Elizabeth focussed on Anita and the real world. Elizabeth was lying on Anita’s mother’s bed. The room was decorated in pink, the quilt covered with bouquets of roses. The headboard, bed tables, and dresser were white wicker. Everything else in the room was selected to match the decor—it looked as if it could grace the cover of
Better Homes and Gardens.
Anita sat on the edge of the bed, wearing a pink sweatshirt covered with small bunnies hopping in all directions. Elizabeth could see the little girl’s own exhaustion, understanding now how draining the ship dream was.
“You’re there, aren’t you, Elizabeth?” Anita asked. “You’re on the ship.”
“Yes.”
“Is something bad happening?” Anita asked.
“Yes, but I can’t see it.”
“Good,” Anita said, and then lay next to her, head on her shoulder.
A phone rang in the living room, and then Anita’s mother came in, handing the phone to Elizabeth. Dr. Birnbaum was on the line.
“It worked, Elizabeth. They’re inside—they’re there,” Birnbaum said.
Elizabeth sat up, the image of the ship still with her, but pushed now to a corner of her mind.
“They found a way to wherever Ralph came from?” Elizabeth asked.
“I think so.”
Elizabeth was afraid and hopeful at the same time. If they could stop the dreams, then Anita and she would be saved, but to stop them Wes and Monica would have to put themselves in danger. Terrible things were happening on the ship.
“Tell them not to go,” Elizabeth said.
Elizabeth’s mind was fuzzy from lack of real sleep and distracted by the ship images still running in the background.
“But they have gone, Elizabeth,” Dr. Birnbaum said. “They disappeared just like the pastor.”
“All of them? Ralph too?”
“Yes.”
Groggy and distracted by the images tucked away in the corner of her mind, Elizabeth couldn’t concentrate. She had been afraid that they would find what they were looking for, and hadn’t wanted Wes and Monica to go in the first place. Now those who were dear to her were in that nightmare world.
“Don’t worry, Elizabeth. Ralph found a way out once and he can do it again.”
Elizabeth thanked Dr. Birnbaum and asked him to call if he heard anything else. Then she handed the phone back to Anita’s mother, who waited expectantly.
“They may have found a way to the ship in Anita’s dream. It means they might be able to stop the dream, but it also means they are in danger. We need to know what is going on. We might be able to help them in some way.”
“You want to dream with Anita again?” Anita’s mother said.
“If there was another way …” Elizabeth said.
“Anita, go get yourself a snack. There are chocolate chip cookies in the jar.”
Reluctantly Anita climbed off the bed and left. When she was gone, her mother sat at the end of the bed, running her hand across the rose-covered bedspread, smoothing out wrinkles. Anita’s mother was meticulous and tender. Watching her daughter slowly deteriorate was painful for her.
“Anita is going to die, isn’t she?”
Elizabeth hesitated. The truth was cruel, but Elizabeth knew it was time to be brutally honest.
“Yes,” Elizabeth said softly. “Unless the dream can be stopped she will die.”
“You’re dying too, aren’t you?”
“Yes. I don’t have much time left. Not as much time as Anita.”
“Every time you share Anita’s dream it makes you worse, and now you have the dream too.”
“Whatever it is about Anita and Wanda—and Margi—that makes them receive the dream was latent in me. By sharing the dream we activated the receiving part of my brain. Every time we share the dream I become more sensitive. I dream about the ship even when I’m awake now.”
Anita’s mother was a strong woman who had explored every avenue to help her daughter. She was also a realist, knowing when the battle was nearing an end.
“Are we shortening Anita’s life when you blend the dreams?”
“I don’t think so. Wanda isn’t physically affected by the dream at all, and I’m particularly sensitive. Anita falls somewhere between the two extremes. If sharing the dream is accelerating her decline, it’s a small effect.”
“It doesn’t matter,” Anita’s mother said.
Her face softened, sadness settling in.
“Her slow death is slow torture for me. A quick death would be kinder for both of us.”
Then her face hardened again as she controlled her grief.
“Anita is still frightened by the scarred man she saw on the ship, and the people in walls and other terrible things. The dream is bad enough for her alone, but when you share the dream with her it becomes a nightmare. I’m willing to let her help, but not if she has to see those things again.”
“It may be possible to keep her from seeing details on the ship. I’m a strong receiver now, so we might be able to set the parameters so that she helps receive but doesn’t perceive the dream.”
Satisfied, Anita’s mother stood.
“I’ll ask Anita if she wants to help.”
When she was gone, Elizabeth picked up the phone and punched in Shamita’s number to tell her to prepare the lab. As she listened to the ringing, she realized that the ship dream was still running in a corner of her mind, and it was growing, threatening to take over her consciousness. One way or another, with or without the other dreamers, she would soon be back on the ship.
“U
h-oh!” Ralph said. “We’re not supposed to be here.”
Wes and Monica looked around in wonder. One minute they had been walking in a field on the outskirts of Las Vegas, and the next they found themselves standing in a compartment—a ship’s compartment. The door they had come through was open, and there was no sign of the green glow. They were in a control room with old-fashioned equipment—radios, radar, sonar, Wes guessed.
“A radio room?” Wes asked.
“Fire control center,” Monica said confidently. Then, pointing through the windows, she said, “They directed the fire of the five- and eight-inch guns from here. With later designs they moved fire control below decks. This was too exposed.”
Surprised by her detailed knowledge of warships, Wes’s suspicions grew. He stepped to the windows that ran the width of one wall and saw the bow of the ship stretched out below. Three turrets were mounted there, one in front of the other. Each turret had three large gun barrels pointed at the bow.
“This is incredible,” Wes said. “How is it possible?”
Wes stepped back through the door he thought they had come through
and found himself in a chart room. There was a large flat table in the middle and racks along one wall filled with rolled charts.
“Flag plot,” Monica said as he came out.
“We’re not getting home that way,” Wes said. Then to Ralph, he said, “Can you find another way back?”
Ralph folded his arms and leaned back, looking serious, his lips puckered.
“I’ll buy you an ice-cream if you do,” Monica offered.
“Chocolate dip?” Ralph countered.
“A large one,” Monica said.
“Well okee-dokee, then,” Ralph said. “It’s a deal and a deal’s a deal. Let’s go.”
“Not yet, Ralph,” Wes said. “We need to find the man called Dawson. Can you take us to him?”
“We gots to get out of here,” Ralph said, starting to walk. “This is where the not so nice people live.”
“The Crazies?” Wes probed, remembering the term from Ralph’s disjointed description of his experiences.
“They’re not so nice. I could talk to them if you want. Sometimes if you talk real nice to people they’re not so bad any more.”
“Let’s go straight to Dawson,” Wes said.
“That’s a good idea,” Ralph agreed.
Ralph led them through the chart room and outside, climbing down a series of ladders to the deck below. Wes continued to be amazed by what he saw—it was a World War II—vintage warship, in perfect condition. Fascinated by the ship, he and Monica had trouble resisting the urge to explore. But Ralph left no time for side trips, setting a brisk pace.
As they climbed down a ladder to the first gun deck level, Wes found himself staring through the rungs at a human face protruding from the steel of the superstructure. Startled, he jumped the rest of the way, landing with a loud thump.
“Don’t be scared, Wes. He won’t hurt you,” Ralph reassured him.
“I’m not scared,” Wes lied.
“There’s lots more like him, but there’s no use talking to them cause they don’t say nothing.”
“Let’s go,” Wes said, eyes on the face in the wall.
Monica studied the face, too, reaching behind the ladder to touch the skin where it met the wall.
“It’s warm, like he’s alive,” Monica said.
Ralph took them through a dark hatch that logically should have taken them toward midship, but they found themselves outside. Ralph didn’t slow, seemingly used to the peculiar time-and-space-twisting geometry of the ship. Wes and Monica drifted toward the rail.
“Slow down a second,” Monica said to Ralph.
Ralph stopped to lecture them.
“We should keep going, Monica,” Ralph said.
“Just a quick look,” Monica said.
Wes and Monica looked over the rail, still struck by the impossibility of this ship in the desert. Just as the dreamers had described, there was desert running a hundred yards from the ship and ending in an opaque wall. Wes looked up and saw nothing above. Looking toward the stern, he saw one of the seaplanes mounted on the stern, and more big guns pointed aft. Then he saw four men emerge from behind the catapult. The biggest man was dressed. in jeans, denim jacket, and boots. His hair was long and black. The three men behind him were sailors, two carrying spears and one a crossbow.
“We gotta go, Wes,” Ralph said. “The big one’s name is Mr. Cobb and he can hurt ya.”
Wes believed Ralph. Cobb’s every move was menacing and his eyes were two coals that burned bright despite their blackness.
They only made a few steps when more men and two women came from the bow, cutting off their escape. They backed under a turret, mounted midships, the twin barrels of the guns above them. Seeing no escape along the deck, Wes pulled the others toward a hatch next to the gun.
“That’s not the way, Wes,” Ralph protested.
“Hurry,” Wes said.
Monica ran ahead while Wes pulled Ralph toward the hatch. Just as Monica opened the hatch, she was lit up with tiny lightning bolts. She fell to the ground, writhing and twitching. The air crackled with the high-pitched buzz of electric current, and the air smelled of ozone. Wes held Ralph back.
“Stop it!” Wes shouted. “You’re killing her!”
Cobb turned to Wes. Wes felt the man’s insanity and saw it in the slow way he moved. Then Cobb brought his hands up, his fingers extended and spread. wide like a magician casting a spell.
“Hihowyadoin?” Ralph said, extending his hand.
Sparks flew from Cobb’s fingers as if he were a human Jacob’s ladder, the bright blue arcs enveloping Ralph. Ralph collapsed, his body convulsing
on the deck. Wes pleaded with Cobb, but the electrocution continued. Desperate, Wes jumped over Ralph, throwing himself into the electrical storm.
Wes was being electrocuted. He lost muscle control and crashed to the deck. His heart, losing the steady rhythm it had kept since the womb, now beat erratically. His eyes teared, his body begged for oxygen, but he couldn’t breathe. His heart felt as if it was coming apart in his chest.
“That’s enough, Cobb,” a woman said.
But it wasn’t enough for Cobb, and the current continued to flow. Wes writhed in pain, rolling across the deck, slamming against the superstructure. Suddenly the pain decreased, the steel grounding him. Wes forced the muscles in his arms to move, pressing his palms against the metal and letting the current flow into the ship. It was still torture, but he was dying more slowly now.
“I said stop it, Cobb!” the woman commanded. “Prophet wants them alive.”
As Wes slipped toward the blackness of unconsciousness, an invisible force threw Cobb across the deck. When he hit, he rolled ten feet before crashing into other Crazies.
Gasping for breath, Wes rolled to his back, hands pressing his chest in a vain attempt to restore a normal rhythm. Slowly, his heart regained its beat and muscle control began to return. Ralph leaned over him.
“Hurts, don’t it?” Ralph said.
A woman looked down on him now. She was dressed in blue slacks and a powder blue blouse with an unusual cut. The shoulders were wide, giving her the look of a football lineman. Her hair was shoulder length and curled up around the bottom—a style popular in the forties. The woman looked him over with compassion.
“Can you walk?” she asked.
Wes tried various muscle groups, rocking from side to side, flexing his arms and legs.
“I need another minute,” he told her.
“Thirty seconds,” the woman said.
“Hihowyadoin?” Ralph said, extending his hand.
The woman smiled at Ralph and took his hand, letting Ralph pump hers vigorously.
“I’m Ralph and this here’s Wes, and that’s Monica. What’s your name?”
“Gertrude, but everyone calls me Gertie.”
“Nice to meet you, Gertie,” Ralph said. “Got any gum?”
“No,” Gertie said.
“Any place around here to get a Slurpee, or an Icee. I can drink a Slushee but I don’t like them too good.”
“I don’t know what those things are, but we don’t have them here,” Gertie said.
“Ice cream?” Ralph asked.
“We don’t eat here, Ralph,” Gertie said. “We’re immortal.”
“Cool,” Ralph said, clearly not understanding. “Well, we gots to be going now. Nice meeting ya.”
With Ralph’s help, Wes got to his feet, but he wobbled, barely controlling his legs. Wes saw Cobb coming up behind Ralph.
“You’re coming with us,” Gertie said.
Cobb reached for Ralph, placing his hand on his shoulder. He was six inches taller than Ralph and his hand was massive. Ralph started to turn, but Cobb’s fingers tightened on him. Wes could see Cobb’s fingers whiten.
“If you zap him I’ll knock you into the desert,” Gertie threatened. Cobb was going to hurt Ralph, but not with his power. His massive paw shook from the pressure of his shoulder pinch. Ralph’s face lost only a bit of its genial look as the hand squeezed his shoulder. Then Ralph reached across with his left hand and put it on top of Cobb’s. Ralph’s hand squeezed, and suddenly Cobb gasped.
“Don’t you zap him,” Gertie warned.
To the amazement of the Crazies gathered around, Ralph lifted Cobb’s hand from his shoulder, turned, and then holding Cobb’s hand with his left, put his right hand in the man’s quivering palm and began to pump it.
“Nice to meet ya,” Ralph said.
“Damn, he’s strong,” someone said from the back.
Cobb tore his hand free, glaring malevolently with his wild eyes. Then he looked at the other Crazies, daring them to make another comment. All looked away.
“Prophet wants them, Cobb. You don’t touch them.”
Gertie turned to Wes and the others.
“He won’t hurt you if you stay close to me,” Gertie said.
Gertie ordered their hands tied.
“We’re looking for a man named Dawson,” Wes said.
“I know him,” Gertie said. “He’s a heretic. When we get him we’re going to burn him.”
With their hands secured, she led off, Ralph following immediately, Monica next, and then Wes. Wes thought about what Gertie had said about wanting to kill Dawson. The harsh reality was that Dawson’s death was the only sure way to save Elizabeth and Anita.