The Road to Amber (12 page)

Read The Road to Amber Online

Authors: Roger Zelazny

Tags: #Collection, #Fantasy, #Science Fiction

BOOK: The Road to Amber
7.66Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
MORRIE

(frowns, then laughs)

Of course I can understand caring about something! Why do you think I’d decided to take Governor Caisson right when I did? The son of a bitch’s business policies had just cost the town a pro football franchise—for one of my favorite teams. And I’d been angling to get them here for decades.

DAVID

So you
were
grabbing him off early?

MORRIE

You bet I was! Then you had to butt in for the first time in your life.

DAVID

I begin to understand…Say, Morrie, you know it’s not too late to transfer my flame to a fresh candle.

MORRIE

True. And you
are
my godson. That still counts for something.

(He stares at the candle)

Probably should. Shouldn’t stay mad forever. Family counts for something.

He stoops and reaches into an opened case back in a recess in the wall. As he does so, DAVID withdraws his left hand from his pocket and reaches forward, touching the failing candle. Drawing forth a fresh candle, MORRIE stands and reaches forward with his other hand toward DAVID’s sputtering taper. He touches it, begins to raise it. Then it slips from his fingers and plunges to the ground.

MORRIE

Shit! Sorry, David!

[Candle goes out. Fade.]

SCENE 2

Lights come up on same scene. MORRIE is no longer there. DAVID is lying on his stomach on the floor. DOREL stands nearby. DAVID raises his head, looks about. He places his palms on the floor and pushes himself up. A candle stub is guttering beside him.

DOREL

Get a candle out of the box, Dave! Hurry! You’ve got to take the flame from the other before it dies again! Never saw one come back on again the way yours did.

DAVID reaches for a small item lying beside the candle, picks up his Five Minute Time Warp. He had activated it when he touched the candle earlier.

DAVID

I knew I’d find a use for the Five Minute Time Warp one day!

With his other hand, DAVID gropes in the carton, takes our a candle, moves it to a position above the failing flame and holds it there. The fresh candle catches the flame. He turns the candle upright and rises to his feet.

DOREL

I want to take you to another tunnel where we can hide your candle amid many. We ought to hurry, in case he’s still in the area.

DAVID walks with DOREL, carrying his candle.

DAVID

Could you locate Betty’s candle, too?

DOREL

Given the time, the appropriate form and the access.

(They continue walking down another tunnel)

I used to work here. I was an invisible entity before he made me a bike. IfI were an invisible entity here again I could keep moving your candle and Betty’s so that he’d never know. I could correct any number of his petty abuses the way I used to. Might keep lighting you new ones, too, if you got into bleafage research.

DAVID

I could be persuaded. What would it take to make you an invisible entity again?

DOREL

I’m not permitted to say.

DAVID

Even if I order you?

DOREL

Even then. This is a different category of restriction. I can’t think of a way to tell you how to get around this one.

They move a little farther down the tunnel and stop.

DOREL

To your left, in that low niche where several others are burning.

DAVID dribbles a little wax to anchor his candle, sets it upon that spot, holds it in place until it’s fixed.

DOREL

Mount.

(DAVID climbs onto the seat)

Back to where you were?

DAVID

Yes.

They arrive in front of the governor’s mansion, DAVID dismounts, sets the kickstand. The front door opens. BETTY appears.

BETTY

Dave!

(DAVID watches as she approaches him. They embrace.)

Dave, what happened? You just sort of faded away.

DAVID

My godfather, Morrie, took me. I’d done something he didn’t like.

BETTY

Your godfather? You never mentioned him before. How could he do that?

DAVID

He is a person with a great power over life, who is responsible for whatever power I possess over death. Fortunately, he thinks I’m dead now. So I believe I’ll have some reconstructive surgery, change the spelling of my name, grow a beard, move to another state and run a small, low-key practice to cover the expense of my bleafage research. I love you. Will you marry me and come along?

DOREL

I hate to tell you that you sound a little crazy, Dave, but you do.

BETTY

(staring at bike)

Are you a ventriloquist, too?

DAVID

No, that was Dorel talking. He just saved my life. He’s a rebel spirit doing time as a bicycle, and he’s been with me since I was a kid. Saved my life a couple of times then, too.

DAVID pats DOREL’s seat. BETTY leans forward and kisses the top of the handlebars.

BETTY

I know. I’ve ridden him with you, remember? Thanks, Dorel, whatever you are.

DOREL falls apart into a smoking collection of golden motes.

BETTY

What did I just set off?

DAVID

Beats me. But since there was no frog I don’t think you get a prince.

BETTY

Guess I’m stuck with you, then.

They watch as the bright cloud assembles itself into a human shape—that of a tall, bewhiskered man in buckskins. He bows to BETTY.

DON LAUREL

Don Laurel. At your service, ma’am.

(He turns and shakes DAVID’s hand.)

Sorry to deprive you of transportation, Dave. But I just got my enchantment broken.

DAVID

Calls for a celebration.

DON LAUREL

(shaking his head)

Now that I’m unbiked I have to find a niche quick, or I’ll fade to airy nothingness. So I’ll be heading back below, and I’ll take up residence in the caves. He’ll never spot an extra invisible entity. And I’ll keep moving both of your candles out of his way. Good luck with the bleafage work. I’ll be in touch.

He turns to smoke again. When it clears he is gone.

DAVID

That’s a relief.

(He embraces BETTY once again.)

But I wish things had gone differently with Morrie. I like him. I’m going to miss him.

BETTY

He doesn’t exactly sound like a nice guy.

DAVID

His line of work hardens him a bit. He’s actually quite sensitive.

BETTY

How can you tell?

DAVID

He likes football and chess.

BETTY

They both represent violence—physical, and abstract.

DAVID

…and hot chocolate. And Schubert’s Quartet in D Minor. And he does care about the balance between life and death, most of the time.

BETTY

I know he’s family. But he scares me.

DAVID
{SONG: LET’S DO IT}

I want to run away with you

And live with you and walk with you

And all those other things they do

When people fall in love.

All those years we missed

With days we never kissed

Were times ground down to grist

Without your love.

The chariot’s wings were clipped,

Its wheels greased.

I could not hear it at my back

Nor to the west nor east.

I’d set upon a fast track and I tripped.

I’d cast away remembering,

I’d walked away from you,

Forgetting all the things that make up love.

Come live with me and let us see

And prove and hold and just plain be

Whatever’s best for you and me

Now we have found our love.

I want to run away with you

And live with you and walk with you

And all the other things they do

When people fall in love.

BETTY comes in on repeat of last two stanzas.

BETTY & DAVID

Come live with me and let us see

And prove and hold and just plain be

Whatever’s best for you and me

Now we have found our love.

I want to run away with you

And live with you and walk with you

And all the other things they do

When people fall in love.

DAVID

Well, we’re going incognito now. Morrie shouldn’t be a problem if we keep a low profile.

[Fade.]

SCENE 3

DAVID

(addresses audience)

I was able to leave it at that for a long time. Betty and I were married, and I did change my name and move to a small town in the South—though I opted against cosmetic surgery. The beard and tinted glasses and a different hair style altered my appearance considerably, or so I thought. I built up a satisfactory practice, had a greenhouse full of bleafage, and set up a small home laboratory. For over a year I managed not to be present at life-and-death crises, and when visiting my patients in the hospital I was able to avoid other patients at terminal moments which might have resulted in an undesired family reunion. You might say I was pathologically circumspect in this regard; even so, I did glimpse Morrie going around corners on a few occasions. I kept wondering, though, given my line ofwork, when—not if—we would meet, and whether I would be able to carry the encounter with sufficient aplomb so as not to reveal that I possessed the ability to see him. When it did occur, of course, it was nowhere near the hospital, and I was not even thinking of these matters. It was a summer-hot Saturday evening…

Squeal of brakes followed by the sound of a heavy impact o.s. DAVID grabs his medical kit, and a flashlight and runs out. BETTY follows him to the corner where two cars have collided. There is broken glass everywhere. Each vehicle has but a driver. DAVID moves rapidly to one of them, checks for a pulse, shakes his head. The other driver, a younger man, was thrown from the car and lies on the pavement, covered with blood. DAVID checks him, too.

DAVID

(to BETTY)

He’s still breathing. Go call 911!

BETTY exits. DAVID slaps a cover on the man’s pneumothorax and moves to deal with the bleeding. MORRIE enters. DAVID glances up, returns to his work with a nod.

DAVID

Can’t argue with you about this one. Take him if you must.

MORRIE

No. Save him for me, Dave. Shoot him up with bleafage. You’ve got all the time you need.

DAVID

What’s so special about him, Morrie? I haven’t forgotten how you treated me when I wanted to make an exception.

MORRIE

All right. I’ll forgive and forget if you’ll do the same—and save this guy. My power, as I’ve said, is not over death. If I simply don’t take him, he’ll be a vegetable.

DAVID

Then how’s about you promise to let me save whom I wish, and do whatever I would with the bleafage? You know I’ll be discreet.

MORRIE

Looks like you’re doing it, anyway. But all right, I’ll make it formal.

DAVID

I wish you could have been at my wedding, Morrie.

MORRIE

I was there.

DAVID

You were? I didn’t see you.

MORRIE

I was in the back. I wore bright colors so you wouldn’t notice me.

DAVID

The guy in the Hawaiian shirt?

MORRIE

Yes, that was me.

DAVID

I’ll be damned.

MORRIE

And I sent you that microwave oven.

DAVID

There was no card with it—

MORRIE

Well, we weren’t talking.

DAVID

I did wonder about the CandlePower brand name. Good oven, though, I’ll give you that. Thanks.

(Injured man on ground moans)

About this guy, Morrie…why are you so dead set against taking him?

MORRIE

You don’t recognize him?

DAVID

Too much blood on his face.

MORRIE

That’s the new quarterback for the Atlanta Falcons.

DAVID

No kidding. But what about the balance between life and death and all that?

MORRIE

They’re really going to need him this season.

MORRIE
{SONG: “SAVE THAT QUARTERBACK”}

Save that quarterback!

Save that quarterback!

I want to see him livin’.

Save that quarterback, lad.

All is long forgiven.

We’ve had our little differences

But families work that way.

It’s time for mending fences

And whatever else we may—

Like that quarterback lying there

Leaking on the ground.

Give him the works

Till he twitches and jerks

And you bring him back around.

Bring that quarterback back.

I want to see him play.

I want to hear the crowd cry out

One bright autumn day.

I want to see him score.

I want to see them win.

Oh, bring that quarterback back

And let the game begin!

They need him, they need him.

They need him

What more can I say?

Save that quarterback,

Save that quarterback

And you’ll save the day!

DAVID

I forgot you were a Falcons fan.

MORRIE

The bleafage, boy, the bleafage!

As the lights fade, DAVID approaches and addresses the audience.

DAVID

And so… The Falcons have been doing well for some time now, not the least because of their new quarterback. Not too many people die during Falcons games, because Morrie comes by for beer and pizza and we watch them on the tube together. He collects with a vengeance afterwards, though, if the Falcons don’t do well. Read the obits. Morrie hints strongly that he’d like to know what I did with the candles. But he can keep on wondering. Don Laurel and I stay in touch. He comes by every Halloween for a glass of blood with a dash of heparin and we bring each other up to date on everything from bleafage to candles. And sometimes he changes into a bicycle for old times’ sake, and we ride between the worlds. This morning I walked back to the crossroads where the accident had occurred…

Other books

Irish Hearts by Nora Roberts
Captive Dragon by Ella Drake
From The Heart by O'Flanagan, Sheila
The Brontë Plot by Katherine Reay
Double Blind by Ken Goddard
The Birthday Girl by Stephen Leather
River Deep by Priscilla Masters