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making it easier to fall asleep. He pressed his rear end back farther in the chair, put his burnt-out pipe in his shirt pocket, and bent forward over the book, lipreading again, following the print with one finger. He read with fierce attention, but again he fooled himself, for though his eyes moved dutifully, focusing on the print, he was running over images in his mind.

Linguistic proliferation, the Vedic priests believed …

Craine had paused, a block from his office, Hannah Johnson standing ample and sweaty at his side. He’d turned around abruptly, but there was no one, or, rather, only those people he might have expected to see— shoppers, high-school students, people leaving work. He kept his panic hidden, eyes darting left and right, finding nothing. Almost without his knowing it, his eyes continued searching, waiting to pounce on some movement in a doorway, some shadow where there ought not to be one. Yellow leaves and old newspapers blew across the street, caught in the gutters, lifted over, and hurried on, like businessmen running with their heads bent. The air had the heavy tornado-weather smell that would be normal back in August, a month ago. He glanced at the sky—wide blue, slashed by jet streams and smudged, down lower, by yellow-white clouds from the smokestack at the edge of the university campus. They were running on crushed and oxygen-blasted sulfur coal; an experiment. “Whole country buried chin-deep in shit,” he muttered, less to Hannah than to the whole sinful nation. His bleary eyes aimed at the smoking horizon, out beyond the last of the city’s low buildings, southward. In the sky, high above the smoke, two hawks hung floating like kites. Craine’s head shook slightly, as if with palsy. He stood with his elbows clamped tightly to the sides of his chest, the left one supporting the Sanskrit book, his right fist, just above his overcoat pocket, closed around the top of the sack that held his whiskey. Through the smoke, he could make out traces of the gouged yellow hills, once thick with oaks and pines and, on the lower slopes, orchards. To the north, once corn land—beyond the range of his vision—lay five-mile-long strip mines, cobalt-blue, blood-red, and rust-colored pools where nothing was astir but invisible insects and the tongues of lizards.

Hannah Johnson bent forward and touched his forearm. “Don’t think about it, Craine,” she said sadly. “You’ll give yourself a heart attack.” To a passing stranger it would have seemed that she was giving him a quarter. Hannah was well kept, matronly, dressed too warmly for the autumn day. She wore a light, purple coat.

She turned her head, following the direction of his angry stare, and pursed her lips unhappily. “I remember when up there was the prettiest scenery in the world,” she said. The corner of her mouth tucked in—a trace of a long-suffering smile. She had the voice of a singer. She stood with her weight on her left leg, her right leg thrown jauntily forward. Her shoes were red. She said, “There was an old Baptist church out on Boskydell Road where my family used to go every Sunday in George Elroy’s pickup, all us children in the back.” She laughed and lightly slapped the air with her hand, remembering. “George Elroy would always sweep it out and put applecrates in for us to sit on, and down the road we’d go in our Sunday good dresses, all hooting and hollerin and wavin at the people … oh yes! The church was in the hollow—pretty white church just up among the trees from the railroad tracks where the granary set, before the fire. You wasn’t here when they still had the granary.” She glanced at him, her expression grieved, checking. “No, you was still in Chicago then, that’s right. It was a regular little village, Boskydell. Big old granary and apple barn, filling station, houses …That ole fire pretty much took all of it. The church is still there, though; mostly white folks now. That’s the way it is, y’know.” She tipped him a little smile and a shy look, as if slapping her knee. “You just get the neighborhood cleaned up nice and doggone it, in comes the white folks!” Craine grimaced back, not real anger, just whiskey, as Hannah no doubt knew. “Don’t think about it, Craine,” she said again, suddenly heavyhearted, and patted his forearm. “Everything gonna be all right. We got the Lord’s own promise.”

“We’ll see,” Craine muttered, looking angrily to the left. Hannah’s talk of God was no better for his temper than whiskey. The whole world’s dying of leukemia, he could have told her. We got twelve thousand tons of TNT for every living person on earth, if you call that living, and more every day, by the trainload, as fast as we can make it. But he said nothing, merely crunched his teeth together. His childish rage was more disgusting to Craine than all the rest.

He shook his arm free, not quite roughly, muttered his farewell and, turning with hardly a nod, walked on. She stood where he’d left her, queenly, surrounded by autumn gold, shaking her silvered head, looking after him. In his mind he watched her, though he walked in the opposite direction. She lived northeast, the Negro section, in a small, crowded house with tin-patched linoleum floors, purple carpeting, red and purple flowers in the windows—geraniums and purple statice. Craine lived downtown. She couldn’t help him, heaven knew. No one, as she must know, could help him. Not that Craine wanted or needed help (Craine set his jaw, sliding his eyes from left to right), staggering through his days, his drunkenness almost unnoticeable except to the canniest eye, he told himself—though perhaps he’d gone a little far there, today; crossed the line there with McClaren and the talking cat.

Craine hurried on toward his hotel room. If someone were to tell him the fates had set him down to be shot dead tomorrow (so Craine

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