“Um.”
“Did you go lots of places?”
“Yes.”
“How come you can hang around Milburn so long? Don’t you have a ship to get back to?”
“Shore leave.”
“Why don’t you ever want to do anything but go to the movies?”
“No reason.”
“Well, I just like being with you.”
“Um.”
“But why don’t you ever take off your shades?”
“No reason.”
“Someday I’ll take them off.”
“Later.”
“Promise?”
“Promise.”
“A terrible thing. I don’t want to tell you now. There’ll be time when it’s all over.”
“You’re frightening me.”
“I’m frightened too.”
“Well, I’m frightened because you’re frightened.” For a time, the Hawthornes simply held each other.
“You know what killed Lewis, don’t you?”
“I think so.”
“Well, I discovered an astonishing thing about myself. I can be a coward. So please don’t tell me. I know I asked, but don’t. I just want to know it’ll end.”
“Sears and I will make it end. With young Wanderley’s help.”
“He can help you?”
“He can. He has already.”
“If only this terrible snow would stop.”
“Yes. But it won’t.”
“Ricky, have I given you an awful time?” Stella propped herself up on an elbow to look into his eyes.
“A worse time than most women would,” he said. “But I rarely wanted any other women.”
“I am sorry that I ever had to cause you pain. Ricky, I’ve never cared for any man as much as I have cared for you. Despite my adventures. You know that’s all over, don’t you?”
“I guessed.”
“He was an appalling man. He was in my car, and I just overwhelmingly realized how much better than he you were. So I made him get out.” Stella smiled. “He shouted at me. It seems I am a bitch.”
“At times you certainly are.”
“At times. You know, he must have found Lewis’s body right after that.”
“Ah. I wondered what he was doing up there.”
Silence: Ricky held his wife’s shoulder, aware of her timeless profile beside him. If she had not looked like that could he have endured it so long? Yet if she had not looked like that, she would not have been Stella— it was an impossible speculation.
“Tell me something, baby,” she breathed. “Who was this other woman you used to want?”
Ricky laughed; then both of them, at least for a time, were laughing.
But even in an immobilized town, things happen. Dozens of cars went off the roads and stayed nose down for days, buried under fresh drifts. Walter Barnes sat in his television room nursing a succession of drinks and watched an endless round of giveaway shows with the sound turned off. Peter cooked their meals. “I could understand a lot of things,” Barnes told his son, “but I sure as hell can’t understand that.” And went back to his quiet, nonstop drinking. One Friday night, Clark Mulligan put the first reel of Night of the Living Dead back in the projector for the Saturday-noon showing, turned off all the lights, flipped the broken lock on the fire door and decided once again not to bother with it and went back out into the blizzard to find Penny Draeger’s body lying half-covered with snow beside an abandoned car. He slapped her face and rubbed her wrists, but nothing he could do would put breath back in her throat or change the expression on her face—G had finally allowed her to take off his dark glasses.
And Elmer Scales finally met the man from Mars.
Elmer’s chair faced his picture window, and with the lights off, he could see about as far as the barn— a big shape in the darkness. Except for where he had shoveled, the snow was waist-high: enough to slow down any sort of creature who was after more of his animals. Elmer did not need light to scribble down the random lines he thought of: by now he did not even have to look at the paper. He could write while staring out the window.
Sometimes it seemed his father was there in the dark room with him, trying to explain something about the old plow horses he’d finally replaced with a John Deere, trying to say that those were good horses, you got to care for them boy, they done good by us, those five kids you got could get a lot of pleasure outa nice old horses like that—horses dead for twenty-five years! —trying to tell him something about the car. Watch them two lawyer boys, sonny, banged up my car and lost it, drove it into a swamp or something, gave me cash dollars but nobody can trust boys like that, no matter how rich they daddies are—creaky old voice getting at him just like when the old man was alive. Elmer wrote it all down, getting it mixed up with the poetry that wasn’t poetry.
Then he saw a shape gliding toward the window, coming toward him through the snow and night with shining eyes. Elmer dropped the pencil and jerked up the shotgun, nearly firing both barrels through the picture window before he realized that the creature was not running away—that it knew he was there and was coming for him.
Elmer kicked away the chair and stood up. He patted his pockets to make sure he was carrying the extra shells, and then lifted the shotgun and sighted down the barrel, waiting for the thing to get close enough for him to see what it really was.
As it advanced, he began to doubt. If it knew he was there, waiting to blast it all the way back to the barn, why wasn’t it running away? He cocked the hammers. The thing was coming up his walk, going between the two big drifts, and Elmer finally saw that it was much shorter than what he had seen before.
Then it left the walk and came over the snow to press its face against the window and he saw that it was a child.
Elmer lowered the gun, numb with confusion. He could not shoot a child. The face at the window peered in at him with a frantic, lost appeal—it was the face of misery, of every human wretchedness. With those yellow eyes, it begged him to come out, to give it rescue.
Elmer moved to the door, hearing his father’s voice behind him. He paused with his hand on the doorknob, the shotgun dangling from his other hand, and then opened the door.
Freezing air, powdery snow blew in his face. The child was standing on the walk with its head averted. Someone said, “Thank you, Mr. Scales.” Elmer jerked his head back and saw the tall man standing on the snowdrift to his left. Way up there, balancing on the snow like a feather, he was smiling gently down at the farmer. His face was ivory, and his eyes were vibrant accumulations of—it seemed to Elmer—a hundred shades of gold.
He was the most beautiful man Elmer had ever seen, and Elmer knew that he could not shoot him if he stood in front of him for a decade with a loaded and cocked shotgun.
“You—why—uh,” Elmer managed to say.
“Precisely, Mr. Scales,” the beautiful man said, and effortlessly stepped down from the snowbank onto the path. When he was facing Elmer, the golden eyes seemed to shimmer with wisdom.
“You’re no Martian,” Elmer said. He did not even feel the cold anymore.
“Why, of course not. I’m part of you, Elmer. You can see that, can’t you?”
Elmer nodded dumbly.
The beautiful thing put a hand on Elmer’s shoulder. “I’m here to talk to you about your family. You’d like to come with us, wouldn’t you, Elmer?”
Elmer nodded again.
“Then there are a few details you have to take care of. At the moment you’re slightly—encumbered? You cannot imagine the harm done to you by the people around you, Elmer. I am afraid there are things about them you have to know.”
“Tell me,” Elmer said.
“With pleasure. And then you will know what to do?”
Elmer blinked.