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Harse glanced at him briefly, then wandered over to the window and stared incuriously at the soiled snow outside.

‘You were fine, Harse,’ said Mooney without spirit. ‘You didn’t do anything wrong at all.’

‘Ah,’ said Harse without turning. ‘So?’

Mooney sat up, reached for the phone, demanded setups and a bottle from room service and hung up.

‘Oh, well,’ he said, beginning to revive, ‘at least we’re in Brooklyn now. Maybe it’s just as well.’

‘As well. What?’

‘I mean this is where you wanted to be. Now we just have to wait four days, until the twenty-sixth. We’ll have to raise some more money, of course,’ he added experimentally.

Harse turned and looked at him with the pale eyes. ‘One thousand dollars you have. Is not enough?’

‘Oh, no, Harse,’ Mooney assured him. ‘Why, that won’t be nearly enough. The room rent in this hotel alone is likely to use that up. Besides all the extras, of course.’

‘Ah.’ Harse, looking bored, sat down in the chair near Mooney, opened his kit, took out the thing that looked like a film viewer and put it to his eyes.

‘We’ll have to sell some more of those things. After all -’ Mooney winked and dug at the pale-eyed man’s ribs with his elbow - ‘we’ll be needing some, well, entertainment.’

Harse took the viewer away from his eyes. He glanced thoughtfully at the elbow and then at Mooney. ‘So,’ he said.

Mooney coughed and changed the subject. ‘One thing, though,’ he begged. ‘Don’t get me in any more trouble like you did in that hotel lobby - or with that guy in the truck. Please? I mean, after all, you’re making it hard for me to carry out my job.’

Harse was thoughtfully silent

‘Promise?’ Mooney urged.

Harse said, after some more consideration: ‘It is not altogether me. That is to say, it is a matter of defence. My picture should not be. Photographed? So the survival kit insures that it is not. You understand?’

Mooney leaned back. “You mean -’ The bellboy with the drinks interrupted him; he took the bottle, signed the chit, tipped the boy and mixed himself a reasonably stiff but not quite stupefying highball, thinking hard.

‘Did you say “survival kit”?’ he asked at last

Harse was deep in the viewer again, but he looked away from it irritably. ‘Naturally, survival kit. So that I can. Survive?’ He went back to the viewer.

Mooney took a long, thoughtful slug of the drink.

* * * *

Survival kit. Why, that made sense. When the Air Force boys went out and raided the islands in the Pacific during the war, sometimes they got shot down - and it was enemy territory, or what passed for it. Those islands were mostly held by Japanese, though their populations hardly knew it. All the aboriginals knew was that strange birds crossed the sky and sometimes men came from them. The politics of the situation didn’t interest the headhunters. What really interested them was heads.

But for a palatable second choice, they would settle for trade goods - cloth, mirrors, beads. And so the bomber pilots were equipped with survival kits - maps, trade goods, rations, weapons, instructions for proceeding to a point where, God willing, a friendly submarine might put ashore a rubber dinghy to take them off.

Mooney said persuasively: ‘Harse. I’m sorry to bother you, but we have to talk.’ The man with the pale eyes took them away from the viewer again and stared at Mooney. ‘Harse, were you shot down like an airplane pilot?’

Harse frowned - not in anger, or at least not at Mooney. It was the effort to make himself understood. He said at last: ‘Yes. Call it that.’

‘And - and this place you want to go - is that where you will be rescued?’

‘Yes.’

Aha, thought Mooney, and the glimmerings of a new idea began to kick and stretch its fetal limbs inside him. He put it aside, to bear and coddle in private. He said: ‘Tell me more. Is there any particular part of Brooklyn you have to go to?’

‘Ah. The Nexus Point?’ Harse put down the viewer and, snap-snap, opened the gleaming kit. He took out the little round thing he had consulted in the house by the cold Jersey sea. He tilted it this way and that, frowned, consulted a small square sparkly thing that came from another part of the case, tilted the round gadget again.

‘Correcting for local time,’ he said, ‘the Nexus Point is one hour and one minute after midnight at what is called. The Vale of Cashmere?’

Mooney scratched his ear. The Vale of Cashmere? Where the devil is that - somewhere in Pakistan?’

‘Brooklyn,’ said Harse with an imp’s grimace. ‘You are the guide and you do not know where you are guiding me to ?’

Mooney said hastily: ‘All right, Harse, all right. I’ll find it But tell me one thing, will you? Just suppose - suppose, I said -that for some reason or other, we don’t make it to the what-you-call, Nexus Point. Then what happens?’

Harse for once neither laughed nor scowled. The pale eyes opened wide and glanced around the room, at the machine-made candlewick spreads on the beds, at the dusty red curtains that made a ‘suite’ out of a long room, at the dog-eared Bible that lay on the night table.

‘Suh,’ he stammered, ‘suh - suh - seventeen years until there is another Nexus Point!’

* * * *

Mooney dreamed miraculous dreams and not entirely because of the empty bottle that had been full that afternoon. There never was a time, never will be a time, like the future Mooney dreamed of - Mooney-owned, houri-inhabited, a fair domain for a live-wire Emperor of the Eons...

He woke up with a splitting head.

Even a man from the future had to sleep, so Mooney had thought, and it had been in his mind that, even this first night, it might pay to stay awake a little longer than Harse, just in case it might then seem like a good idea to - well, to bash him over the head and grab the bag. But the whisky had played him dirty and he had passed out - drunk, blind drunk, or at least he hoped so. He hoped that he hadn’t seen what he thought he had seen sober.

He woke up and wondered what was wrong. Little tinkling ice spiders were moving around him. He could hear their tiny crystal sounds and feel their chill legs, so lightly, on him. It was still a dream - wasn’t it?

Or was he awake? The thing was, he couldn’t tell. If he was awake, it was the middle of the night, because there was no light whatever; and besides, he didn’t seem to be able to move.

Thought Mooney with anger and desperation: I’m dead. And: What a time to die!

But second thoughts changed his mind; there was no heaven and no hell, in all the theologies he had investigated, that included being walked over by tiny spiders of ice. He felt them. There was no doubt about it.

It was Harse, of course - had to be. Whatever he was up to, Mooney couldn’t say, but as he lay there sweating cold sweat and feeling the crawling little feet, he knew that it was something Harse had made happen.

Little by little, he began to be able to see - not much, but enough to see that there really was something crawling. Whatever the things were, they had a faint, tenuous glow, like the face of a watch just before dawn. He couldn’t make out shapes, but he could tell the size - not much bigger than a man’s hand -and he could tell the number, and there were dozens of them.

He couldn’t turn his head, but on the walls, on his chest, on his face, even on the ceiling, he could see faint moving patches of fox-firelight

* * * *

He took a deep breath. ‘Harse!’ he started to call; wake him up, make him stop this! But he couldn’t. He got no further than the first huff of the aspirate when the scurrying cold feet were on his lips. Something cold and damp lay across them and it stuck. Like spider silk, but stronger - he couldn’t speak, couldn’t move his lips, though he almost tore the flesh.