By the light of the moon
and
strongly of uncountable varieties of dust. Here and there, a few
cocoons were fixed to the sloped planks of the ceiling, little sacs
of insect industry vaguely phosphorescent in the murk. Nearer, just
above her head, an elaborate spider web spanned the junction of two
rafters; though its architect had either perished or gone
traveling, the web was grimly festooned with four moths, their gray
wings spread in the memory of flight, their body shells sucked
empty by the absent arachnid.
'We're doomed,' she murmured as she turned to the open trapdoor,
dropped to her knees, and peered down the ladder.
Shep stood on the bottom rung. He gripped a higher rung with
both hands. Head bowed as if this were some kind of prayer ladder,
he appeared reluctant to climb farther.
Behind Shep, Dylan glanced through the open closet door, into
the guest bedroom, no doubt expecting to see men on the porch roof
beyond the windows.
'Ice,' said Shep.
To Jilly, Dylan said, 'Coax him up.'
'What if there's a fire?'
'That's damn poor coaxing.'
'Ice.'
'It's a tinderbox up here. What if there's a fire?'
'What if Earth's magnetic pole shifts?' he asked
sarcastically.
'That I've got plans for. Can't you push him?'
'I can sort of encourage him, but it's pretty much impossible to
push someone up a ladder.'
'It's not against the laws of physics.'
'What're you, an engineer?'
'Ice.'
'I've got bags and bags of ice up here, sweetie,' she lied.
'Push him, Dylan.'
'I'm trying.'
'Ice.'
'Plenty of ice up here, Shep. Come on up here with me.'
Shep wouldn't move his hands. He clung stubbornly to his
perch.
Jilly couldn't see Shepherd's face, only the top of his bowed
head.
From below, Dylan lifted his brother's right foot and moved it
to the next rung.
'Ice.'
Unable to get the image of the dead moths out of her head, and
growing desperate, Jilly gave up on the idea of coaxing Shep to the
attic, and instead hoped to break through to him by transforming
his monologue on ice into a dialogue.
'Ice,' he said.
She said, 'Frozen water.'
Dylan lifted Shepherd's left foot onto the higher rung to which
he'd already transferred the right, but still Shepherd wouldn't
move his hands.
'Ice.'
'Sleet,' Jilly said.
Far down in the house, on the ground floor, someone kicked in a
door. Considering that the volleys of gunfire must have reduced the
outer doors to dust or to lacy curtains of splinters, the only
doors requiring a solid kick would probably be inside the house. A
search had begun.
'Ice.'
'Hail.'
'Ice.'
'Floe,' Jilly said.
Another crash downstairs: This one reverberated all the way up
through the house, trembling the floor under Jilly's knees.
Below, Dylan closed the closet door, and their situation seemed
markedly more claustrophobic.
'Ice.'
'Glacier.'
Just when she suspected that Shepherd was about to respond to
her, Jilly exhausted her supply of synonyms for ice and words for
types of ice. She decided to change the nature of the game, adding
a word to Shepherd's ice as if to complete a thought.
Shep said, 'Ice.'
'Berg,' said Jilly.
'Ice.'
'Cube.'
All this talk of ice made the attic hotter, hotter. Dust on the
rafters, dust on the floor, dust drifting in the air seemed about
to combust.
'Ice.'
'Rink.'
'Ice.'
'Skater.'
'Ice.'
'Hockey. You ought to be embarrassed, sweetie, taking the easy
half of the game, always the same word.'
Shepherd had raised his bowed head. He stared at the section of
the ladder rung exposed between his clenched hands.
Downstairs: more crashing, more breaking, a quick nervous burst
of gunfire.
'Ice.'
'Cream. Shep, how much fun would it be to work a puzzle that
only had one piece?'
'Ice.'
'Pick.'
'Ice.'
'Tongs.'
As she slipped new words into his head, ice no longer ricocheted
around in there all by itself. A subtle change occurred in his
face, a softening, suggesting a relaxation of this obsession. She
felt sure she wasn't imagining it. Pretty sure.
'Ice.'
'Bucket.'
'Ice.'
'Age. You know what, sweetie? Even if I've got the harder half
of this game, it's a bunch more fun than listening to synonyms for feces .'
A faint smile found his lips, but almost at once he breathed it
away with a trembling exhalation.
'Ice.'
'Cold.'
Shepherd shifted his right hand to a higher rung, then his left.
Then to a still higher rung. 'Ice.'
'Bag.'
Shepherd moved his feet without assistance from his brother.
Downstairs the doorbell rang. Even in a squad of professional
killers, there had to be a
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