From the Corner of His Eye
vanilla ice cream in a tall glass of root beer, and after changing quickly into their pajamas, they sat together in Barty's bed, enjoying their treats, while she read aloud the last sixty pages of Starman Jones.
No weekend had ever passed so quickly, and no midnight had ever brought with it such dread.
Barty slept in his mother's bed that night.
Shortly after Agnes turned out the light, she said, "Kiddo, it's been one whole week since you walked where the rain wasn't, and I've been doing a lot of thinking about that."
"It's not scary," he assured her again.
"Well, it still is to me. But what I've been wondering
when you talk about all the ways things are
is there someplace where you don't have this problem with your eyes?"
"Sure. That's how it works with everything. Everything that can happen does happen, and each different way of happening makes a whole new place."
"I didn't follow that at all."
He sighed. "I know."
"Do you see these other places?"
"Just feel 'em. "
"Even when you walk in them?"
"I don't really walk in them. I sort of just walk
in the idea of them."
"I don't suppose you could make that any clearer for your old mom, huh?"
"Maybe someday. Not now."
"So
how far away are these places?"
"All here together now."
"Other Bartys and other Agneses in other houses like this-all here together now."
"Yeah."
"And in some of them, your dad's alive."
"Yeah."
"And in some of them, maybe I died the night you were born, and you live alone with your dad."
"Some places, it has to be like that." some places it has to be that your eyes are okay?"
"There's lots of places where I don't have bad eyes at all. And then lots of places where I have it worse or don't have it as bad, but still have it some."
Agnes remained mystified by this talk, but a week before, in the rain-swept cemetery, she had learned there was substance to it.
She said, "Honey, what I'm wondering is
could you walk where you don't have bad eyes, like you walked where the rain wasn't
and leave the tumors in that other place? Could you walk where you have good eyes and come back with them?"
"It doesn't work that way."
"Why not?"
He considered the issue for a while. "I don't know."
"Will you think about it for me?"
"Sure. It's a good question."
She, smiled. "Thanks. I love you, sweetie."
"I love you, too."
"Have you said your silent prayers?"
"I'll say them now."
Agnes said hers, too.
She lay beside her boy in the darkness, gazing at the covered window, where the faint glow of the moon pressed through the blind, suggesting another world thriving with strange life just beyond a thin membrane of light.
Murmuring on the edge of sleep, Barty spoke to his father in all the places where Joey still lived: "Good-night, Daddy."
Agnes's faith told her that the world was infinitely complex and full of mystery, and in a peculiar way, Barty's talk of infinite possibilities supported her belief and gave her the comfort to sleep. Monday morning, New Year's Day, Agnes carried two suitcases out of the back door, set them on the porch, and blinked in surprise at the sight of Edom's yellow-and-white Ford Country Squire parked in the driveway, in front of the garage. He and Jacob were loading their suitcases into the car.
They came to her, picked up the luggage that she had put down, and Edom said, "I'll drive."
"I'll sit up front with Edom," Jacob said. "You can ride in back with Barty. "
In all their years, neither twin had ever set foot beyond the limits of Bright Beach. They both appeared nervous but determined.
Barty came out of the house with the library copy of Podkayne Of Mary, which his mother had promised to read to him later, in the hospital. "Are we all going?" he asked.
"Looks that way," said Agnes.
"Wow."
"Exactly."
In spite of major earthquakes pending, explosions of dynamite hauling trucks on the highway, tornadoes somewhere churning, the grim likelihood of a great dam bursting along the route, freak ice storms stored up in the unpredictable heavens, crashing planes and runaway trains converging on the coastal highway, and the possibility of a
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