The Stories of Ray Bradbury (80 page)

BOOK: The Stories of Ray Bradbury
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‘But if the machine should fail while you’re still running near its beam?’

‘Let’s not think of that,’ he said.

A moment later he was outside. He staggered as if kicked in the stomach. His heart almost exploded in him. The environment of his world forced him into swift living again. He felt his pulse rise, kicking through his veins.

The night was cold as death. The heat ray from the ship sliced across the valley, humming, solid and warm. He moved next to it, very close. One misstep in his running and—

‘I’ll be back,’ he called to Lyte.

He and the ray of light went together.

In the early morning the peoples in the caves saw the long finger of orange incandescence and the weird whitish apparition floating, running along beside it. There was muttering and moaning and many sighs of awe.

And when Sim finally reached the cliffs of his childhood he saw alien peoples swarming there. There were no familiar faces. Then he realized how foolish it was to expect familiar faces. One of the older men glared down at him. ‘Who’re you?’ he shouted. ‘Are you from the enemy cliff? What’s your name?’

‘I am Sim, the son of Sim!’

‘Sim!’

An old woman shrieked from the cliff above him. She came hobbling down the stone pathway. ‘Sim, Sim, it
is
you!’

He looked at her, frankly bewildered. ‘But I don’t know you,’ he murmured.

‘Sim, don’t you recognize me? Oh, Sim, it’s me! Dark!’

‘Dark!’

He felt sick at his stomach. She fell into his arms. This old, trembling woman with the half-blind eyes, his sister.

Another face appeared above. That of an old man. A cruel, bitter face. It looked down at Sim and snarled. ‘Drive him away!’ cried the old man. ‘He comes from the cliff of the enemy. He’s lived there! He’s still young! Those who go there can never come back among us. Disloyal beast!’ And a rock hurtled down.

Sim leaped aside, pulling the old woman with him.

A roar came from the people. They ran toward Sim, shaking their fists. ‘Kill him, kill him!’ raved the old man, and Sim did not know who he was.

‘Stop!’ Sim held out his hands. ‘I come from the ship!’

‘The ship?’ The people slowed. Dark clung to him, looking up into his young face, puzzling over his smoothness.

‘Kill him, kill him, kill him!’ croaked the old man, and picked up another rock.

‘I offer you ten days, twenty days, thirty more days of life!’

The people stopped. Their mouths hung open. Their eyes were incredulous.

‘Thirty days?’ It was repeated again and again. ‘How?’

‘Come back to the ship with me. Inside it, one can live forever!’

The old man lifted high a rock, then, choking, fell forward in an apoplectic fit, and tumbled down the rocks to lie at Sim’s feet.

Sim bent to peer at the ancient one, at the raw, dead eyes, the loose, sneering lips, the crumpled, quiet body.

‘Chion!’

‘Yes,’ said Dark behind him, in a croaking, strange voice. ‘Your enemy. Chion.’

That night two hundred men started for the ship. The water ran in the new channel. One hundred of them were drowned or lost behind in the cold. The others, with Sim, got through to the ship.

Lyte awaited them, and threw wide the metal door.

The weeks passed. Generations lived and died in the cliffs, while the Scientists and workers labored over the ship, learning its functions and its parts.

On the last day, two dozen men moved to their stations within the ship. Now there was a destiny of travel ahead.

Sim touched the control plates under his fingers.

Lyte, rubbing her eyes, came and sat on the floor next to him, resting her head against his knee, drowsily. ‘I had a dream,’ she said, looking off at something far away. ‘I dreamed I lived in caves in a cliff on a cold-hot planet where people grew old and died in eight days.’

‘What an impossible dream,’ said Sim. ‘People couldn’t possibly live in such a nightmare. Forget it. You’re awake now.’

He touched the plates gently. The ship rose and moved into space.

Sim was right.

The nightmare was over at last.

The Anthem Sprinters

‘There’s no doubt of it, Doone’s the best.’

‘Devil take Doone!’

‘His reflex is uncanny, his lope on the incline extraordinary, he’s off and gone before you reach for your hat.’

‘Hoolihan’s better, any day!’

‘Day, hell. Why not
now
?’

I was at the far end of the bar at the top of Grafton Street listening to the tenors singing, the concertinas dying hard, and the arguments prowling the smoke, looking for opposition. The pub was the Four Provinces and it was getting on late at night, for Dublin. So there was the sure threat of everything shutting at once, meaning spigots, accordions, piano lids, soloists, trios, quartets, pubs, sweet shops and cinemas. In a great heave like the Day of Judgment, half Dublin’s population would be thrown out into raw lamplight, there to find themselves wanting in gum-machine mirrors. Stunned, their moral and physical sustenance plucked from them, the souls would wander like battered moths for a moment, then wheel about for home.

But now here I was listening to a discussion the heat of which, if not the light, reached me at fifty paces.

‘Doone!’

‘Hoolihan!’

Then the smallest man at the far end of the bar, turning, saw the curiosity enshrined in my all too open face and shouted, ‘You’re American, of course! And wondering what we’re up to? Do you trust my looks? Would you bet as I told you on a sporting event of great local consequence? If “Yes” is your answer, come here!’

So I strolled my Guinness the length of the Four Provinces to join the shouting men, as one violinist gave up destroying a tune and the pianist hurried over, bringing his chorus with him.

‘Name’s Timulty!’ The little man took my hand.

‘Douglas,’ I said. ‘I write for the cinema.’

‘Fillums!’ cried everyone.

‘Films,’ I admitted modestly.

‘What luck! Beyond belief!’ Timulty seized me tighter. ‘You’ll be the best judge ever, as well as bet! Are you much for sports? Do you know, for instance, the cross-country, the four-forty, and such man-on-foot excursions?’

‘I’ve witnessed two Olympic Games.’

‘Not just fillums, but the world competition!’ Timulty gasped. ‘You’re the rare one. Well, now what do you know of the special all-Irish decathlon event which has to do with picture theaters?’

‘What event is that?’

‘What indeed! Hoolihan!’

An even littler fellow, pocketing his harmonica, leaped forward, smiling. ‘Hoolihan, that’s me. The best Anthem Sprinter in all Ireland!’


What
sprinter?’ I asked.

‘A-n-t,’ spelled Hoolihan, much too carefully, ‘-h-e-m. Anthem. Sprinter. The fastest.’

‘Since you been in Dublin,’ Timulty cut in, ‘have you attended the cinema?’

‘Last night,’ I said, ‘I saw a Clark Gable film. Night before, an old Charles Laughton—’

‘Enough! You’re a fanatic, as are all the Irish. If it weren’t for cinemas and pubs to keep the poor and workless off the street or in their cups, we’d have pulled the cork and let the isle sink long ago. Well.’ He clapped his hands. ‘When the picture ends each night, have you observed a peculiarity of the breed?’

‘End of the picture?’ I mused. ‘Hold on! You can’t mean the national anthem, can you?’


Can
we, boys?’ cried Timulty.

‘We can!’ cried all.

‘Any night, every night, for tens of dreadful years, at the end of each damn fillum, as if you’d never heard the baleful tune before,’ grieved Timulty, ‘the orchestra strikes up for Ireland. And what happens
then
?’

‘Why,’ said I, falling in with it, ‘if you’re any man at all, you try to get out of the theater in those few precious moments between the end of the film and the start of the anthem.’

‘You’ve nailed it!’

‘Buy the Yank a drink!’

‘After all,’ I said casually, ‘I’m in Dublin four months now. The anthem has begun to pale. No disrespect meant,’ I added hastily.

‘And none taken!’ said Timulty. ‘Or given by any of us patriotic IRA veterans, survivors of the Troubles and lovers of country. Still, breathing
the same air ten thousand times makes the senses reel. So, as you’ve noted, in that God-sent three—or four-second interval any audience in its right mind beats it the hell out. And the best of the crowd is—’

‘Doone,’ I said. ‘Or Hoolihan. Your Anthem Sprinters!’

They smiled at me. I smiled at them.

We were all so proud of my intuition that I bought them a round of Guinness.

Licking the suds from our lips, we regarded each other with benevolence.

‘Now,’ said Timulty, his voice husky with emotion, his eyes squinted off at the scene, ‘at this very moment, not one hundred yards down the slight hill, in the comfortable dark of the Grafton Street Theatre, seated on the aisle of the fourth row center is—’

‘Doone,’ said I.

‘The man’s eerie,’ said Hoolihan, lifting his cap to me.

‘Well’—Timulty swallowed his disbelief—‘Doone’s there all right. He’s not seen the fillum before, it’s a Deanna Durbin brought back by the asking, and the time is now…’

Everyone glanced at the wall clock.

‘Ten o’clock!’ said the crowd.

‘And in just fifteen minutes the cinema will be letting the customers out for good and all.’

‘And?’ I asked.

‘And,’ said Timulty. ‘And! If we should send Hoolihan here in for a test of speed and agility, Doone would be ready to meet the challenge.’

‘He didn’t go to the show just for an Anthem Sprint, did he?’

‘Good grief, no. He went for the Deanna Durbin songs and all. Doone plays the piano here, for sustenance. But if he should casually note the entrance of Hoolihan here, who would make himself conspicuous by his late arrival just across from Doone, well, Doone would know what was up. They would salute each other and both sit listening to the dear music until FINIS hove in sight.’

‘Sure.’ Hoolihan danced lightly on his toes, flexing his elbows. ‘Let me at him, let me
at
him!’

Timulty peered close at me. ‘Mr Douglas, I observe your disbelief. The details of the sport have bewildered you. How is it, you ask, that full-grown men have time for such as this? Well, time is the one thing the Irish have plenty of lying about. With no jobs at hand, what’s minor in your country must be made to look major in ours. We have never seen the elephant, but we’ve learned a bug under a microscope is the greatest beast on earth. So while it hasn’t passed the border, the Anthem Sprint’s a high-blooded sport once you’re in it. Let me nail down the rules!’

‘First,’ said Hoolihan reasonably, ‘knowing what he knows now, find out if the man wants to bet.’

Everyone looked at me to see if their reasoning had been wasted.

‘Yes,’ I said.

All agreed I was better than a human being.

‘Introductions are in order,’ said Timulty. ‘Here’s Fogarty, exit-watcher supreme. Nolan and Clannery, aisle-superintendent judges. Clancy, timekeeper. And general spectators O’Neill, Bannion and the Kelly boys, count ’em! Come on!’

I felt as if a vast street-cleaning machine, one of those brambled monsters all mustache and scouring brush, had seized me. The amiable mob floated me down the hill toward the multiplicity of little blinking lights where the cinema lured us on. Hustling, Timulty shouted the essentials:

‘Much depends on the character of the theater, of course!’

‘Of course!’ I yelled back.

‘There be the liberal free-thinking theaters with grand aisles, grand exits and even grander, more spacious latrines. Some with so much porcelain, the echoes alone put you in shock. Then there’s the parsimonious mousetrap cinemas with aisles that squeeze the breath from you, seats that knock your knees, and doors best sidled out of on your way to the men’s lounge in the sweet shop across the alley. Each theater is carefully assessed, before, during and after a sprint, the facts set down. A man is judged then, and his time reckoned good or inglorious, by whether he had to fight his way through men and women
en masse
, or mostly men, mostly women, or, the worst, children at the flypaper matinees. The temptation with children, of course, is to lay into them as you’d harvest hay, tossing them in windrows to left and right, so we’ve stopped that. Now mostly it’s nights here at the Grafton!’

The mob stopped. The twinkling theater lights sparkled in our eyes and flushed our cheeks.

‘The ideal cinema,’ said Fogarty.

‘Why?’ I asked.

‘Its aisles,’ said Clannery, ‘are neither too wide nor too narrow, its exits well placed, the door hinges oiled, the crowds a proper mixture of sporting bloods and folks who mind enough to leap aside should a Sprinter, squandering his energy, come dashing up the aisle.’

I had a sudden thought. ‘Do you—handicap your runners?’

‘We do! Sometimes by shifting exits when the old are known too well. Or we put a summer coat on one, a winter coat on another. Or seat one chap in the sixth row, while the other takes the third. And if a man turns terrible feverish swift, we add the greatest known burden of all—’

‘Drink?’ I said.

‘What else? Now, Doone, being fleet, is a two-handicap man. Nolan!’
Timulty held forth a flask. ‘Run this in. Make Doone take two swigs, big ones.’

Nolan ran.

Timulty pointed. ‘While Hoolihan here, having already gone through all Four Provinces of the pub this night, is amply weighted. Even all!’

‘Go now, Hoolihan,’ said Fogarty. ‘Let our money be a light burden on you. We’ll see you bursting out that exit five minutes from now, victorious and first!’

‘Let’s synchronize watches!’ said Clancy.

‘Synchronize my back-behind,’ said Timulty. ‘Which of us has more than dirty wrists to stare at? It’s you alone, Clancy, has the time. Hoolihan, inside!’

Hoolihan shook hands with us all, as if leaving for a trip around the world. Then, waving, he vanished into the cinema darkness.

At which moment, Nolan burst back out, holding high the half-empty flask. ‘Doone’s handicapped!’

‘Fine! Clannery, go check the contestants, be sure they sit opposite each other in the fourth row, as agreed, caps on, coats half buttoned, scarves properly furled. Report back to me.’

Clannery ran into the dark.

‘The usher, the ticket taker?’ I said.

‘Are inside, watching the fillum,’ said Timulty. ‘So much standing is hard on the feet. They won’t interfere.’

‘It’s ten-thirteen,’ announced Clancy. ‘In two more minutes—’

‘Post time,’ I said.

‘You’re a dear lad,’ admitted Timulty.

Clannery came hot-footing out.

‘All set! In the right seats and everything!’

‘’Tis almost over! You can tell—toward the end of any fillum the music has a way of getting out of hand.’

‘It’s loud, all right,’ agreed Clannery. ‘Full orchestra and chorus behind the singing maid now. I must come tomorrow for the entirety. Lovely.’

‘Is it?’ said Clancy, and the others.

‘What’s the tune?’

‘Ah, off with the tune!’ said Timulty. ‘One minute to go and you ask the tune! Lay the bets. Who’s for Doone? Who Hoolihan?’ There was a multitudinous jabbering and passing back and forth of money, mostly shillings.

I held out four shillings.

‘Doone,’ I said.

‘Without having seen him?’

‘A dark horse,’ I whispered.

‘Well said!’ Timulty spun about. ‘Clannery, Nolan, inside, as aisle judges! Watch sharp there’s no jumping the
FINIS
.’

In went Clannery and Nolan, happy as boys.

‘Make an aisle, now. Mr Douglas, you over here with me!’

The men rushed to form an aisle on each side of the two closed main entrance-exit doors.

‘Fogarty, lay your ear to the door!’

This Fogarty did. His eyes widened.

‘The damn music is extra loud!’

One of the Kelly boys nudged his brother. ‘It will be over soon. Whoever is to die is dying this moment. Whoever is to live is bending over him.’

‘Louder still!’ announced Fogarty, head up against the door panel, hands twitching as if he were adjusting a radio. ‘There! That’s the grand
ta-ta
for sure that comes just as
FINIS OR THE END
jumps on the screen.’

‘They’re off!’ I murmured.

‘Stand!’ said Timulty.

We all stared at the door.

‘There’s the anthem!’

‘’Tenshun!’

We all stood erect. Someone saluted.

But still we stared at the door.

‘I hear feet running,’ said Fogarty.

‘Whoever it is had a good start before the anthem—’

The door burst wide.

Hoolihan plunged to view, smiling such a smile as only breathless victors know.

‘Hoolihan!’ cried the winners.

‘Doone!’ cried the losers. ‘Where’s Doone?’

For, while Hoolihan was first, a competitor was lacking.

The crowd was dispersing into the street now.

‘The idiot didn’t come out the wrong door?’

We waited. The crowd was soon gone.

Timulty ventured first into the empty lobby.

‘Doone?’

No one there.

‘Could it be he’s in
there
?’

Someone flung the men’s room door wide. ‘Doone?’

No echo, no answer.

‘Good grief,’ cried Timulty, ‘it can’t be he’s broken a leg and lies on the slope somewhere with the mortal agonies?’

‘That’s it!’

The island of men, heaving one way, changed gravities and heaved the other, toward the inner door, through it, and down the aisle, myself following.

‘Doone!’

Clannery and Nolan were there to meet us and pointed silently down. I jumped into the air twice to see over the mob’s head. It was dim in the vast theater. I saw nothing.

‘Doone!’

Then at last we were bunched together near the fourth row on the aisle. I heard their boggled exclamations as they saw what I saw:

Doone, still seated in the fourth row on the aisle, his hands folded, his eyes shut.

Dead?

None of that.

A tear, large, luminous and beautiful, fell on his cheek. Another tear, larger and more lustrous, emerged from his other eye. His chin was wet. It was certain he had been crying for some minutes.

The men peered into his face, circling, leaning.

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