The truck pulled over and parked. Harris scrambled up and over the tailgate as fast as his leg would allow him. But as his feet came down on the brick of the street more pain jolted through his wound and his head swam with dizziness. It was a moment before he could turn to the sidewalk. Once again, he wasn’t fast enough.
From behind him: “Here, now!” A man’s voice, clipped, deep.
Harris sighed and turned.
The truck’s driver stood at the left rear quarter of the truck. He was a short man, no more than five and a half feet tall, but very broad shouldered. He wore a flannel shirt and dark pants but, incongruously, was barefoot. His gray hair, flowing long from beneath his fedora-type hat, suggested that he was an older man, but his face was ruddy and unlined. He held an elaborately curved pipe in one hand and an unlit match in the other as he looked gravely at Harris. “You steal anything, son?”
Harris shook his head. It was a stupid question; he couldn’t have stuffed one of those wooden crates under his jacket.
“Imagine that,” the man said. He lit his pipe, puffing a moment, and then tossed the match into the street. “Truck full of talk-boxes and you don’t try to take a thing. Must be an honest man.” He spoke without irony. There was a faint accent, an odd lilt to his words, but Harris couldn’t place it. “You look like you’re fresh off the boat. Looking for work? I have a fair of sisters’ worth of deliveries left tonight. Could use a man to unload. I’ll pay a dec.”
Harris tried to follow the man’s odd words, couldn’t quite grasp all their meaning. “Uh, no, I can’t. I—” He gestured vaguely at his leg. “I got hurt.”
The barefoot man glanced, and his eyebrows rose. “You did. Lot o’ red, son. You have any money?”
Harris shook his head.
The barefoot man fished around in one of his shirt pockets and drew out something that glinted silver in the streetlight; he pressed it into Harris’ hand. “Get to a doctor before that cut fouls. I saw enough of that in the war, don’t need to see it at home.”
Harris stared stupidly at what the man had given him. It was a big coin, maybe two and a half inches in diameter, and heavy. On the face was the profile of a handsome, lean man with a prominent nose and a crown; on the back, a three-masted sailing ship. It looked like real silver.
“That’s a full lib, son,” the barefoot man continued. He unlatched and lowered the truck’s tailgate. “That’ll get you fixed up. When you’re on your feet again, you can pay it back to Banwite’s Talk-Boxes and Electrical Eccentricities. That’s me, Brian Banwite.” He scrambled up into the bed of the truck.
“Brian Banwite,” Harris repeated dully. “Thanks.” He slid the coin into his pants pocket and moved to the sidewalk, then turned back to the truck.
Banwite climbed back out of the bed, a large wooden crate over his shoulder. On its side were stenciled the words “Model 20, Double, Black.”
“Uh, sir?”
“Yes, son.”
“Where am I?”
“Cranshire.” Brian pointed past Harris. “A few blocks that way you get to Binshire.” He jerked a thumb over his shoulder, gesturing the other way. “North is Drakshire. That’s my neighborhood, Drakshire.” Then he pointed to Harris’ right. “River’s that way.”
“No, I mean . . . what city?”
Banwite laughed. “You aren’t just fresh off the boat, you stowed away on it. This is Neckerdam, son. You’ve reached the big city.” He turned away and marched up the walk to the nearest house.
Harris wanted to say, No, what I want to know is, where’s Gaby? But Brian Banwite wouldn’t know. For lack of anything better to do, he slowly turned toward Binshire and moved that way.
The breeze was cool. The concrete was solid under his feet. Harris passed stoops leading up to building doorways a few feet above street level and could grip them, feel the reality of them. Feel the insistent burn of the slashes on his leg. Nothing that had happened since he woke up in Central Park made any sense, but it had happened.
And yet, in the half-dozen lit windows he peered up into, there were furnishings that looked like the ones they’d cleaned out of his late grandfather’s house. Wooden chairs with carved, curved legs. Stiff, upright sofas. There was something that looked like a TV set, but with a round screen; it was not turned on. Most of these furnishings were new, in good shape.
And the people . . . One man in three wore a tie in the comfort of his own home. The women were in knee-length dresses, dated of style but bright of color. A happy young couple listened to a radio, which blared something that sounded like Irish dance music.
There were no old people. Well, no old people who looked really old. White hair framing young faces.
Then he caught sight of the woman working over her stove. The woman with pointed ears.
They weren’t like those of Mr. Spock on TV, not rising to a devilish point at the rear. They were normal except for the slight, subtle point right in the middle of the curve at the top. Harris looked for pointed ears in the next dozen people whose windows he passed and saw them on three; the rest had ears he considered normal.
Dully, he shook his head. He didn’t understand what was happening. It confused him. It had hurt him.
Therefore it was the enemy.
It wasn’t enough that the whole world was his enemy. Now, it was a world he didn’t even recognize.
When you didn’t know what an opponent could do, you stood back, ducked and feinted, watched him work until you understood what you were up against.
That’s what Harris would do. Then he would fight back.
His shoelaces flopped around as he walked; his shoes had come untied. Noticing that, he suddenly felt sad, but couldn’t explain why.
Harris looked out over what should have been the Brooklyn Bridge.
It stretched across a broad waterway that, lined with lights on both shores, seemed to follow the contours of the East River. But where both of the Brooklyn Bridge’s stone support towers had two soaring arches, this bridge’s towers had only one apiece . . . and yellow lights shone from windows at the top of each tower, as though the bridge’s heights were occupied. Where the Brooklyn Bridge had its elevated pedestrian walkway along the center, between the outbound and inbound roadways, this bridge had two wooden walkways at road level along the sides, overlooking the water. And this bridge seemed darker and heavier than the one he was used to, its support pillars more massive.
It was the right river and the right place . . . but the wrong bridge. Harris limped along its walkway to see more.
The brisk north wind tugged at his clothes and chilled him. His leg ached worse than ever and his hands trembled from exhaustion when he didn’t keep them jammed into his pockets. Maybe he should have done what Brian Banwite said—find a doctor, get it bandaged up. But with everything so wrong, he knew deep down that all the doctors had to be wrong, too. Instead, he kept moving. The strangeness of this place wouldn’t get him if he kept moving.
An endless stream of antiquated cars roared by, always going the wrong direction on the road. Once there was a motorcycle with a sidecar attached, its helmetless driver not even glancing at Harris through his thick aviator-style goggles.
Harris caught sight of lights moving up in the sky; they floated over the skyline in far too slow, steady and stately a fashion to be an airplane or even a helicopter. He watched, puzzled, until portions of the aircraft were caught in a spotlight shining up from the city, and Harris recognized it as a zeppelin, drifting as serenely as a cloud.