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Chapter no 15 – The Smoke-Hole

IT by Stephen King

Richie Tozier pushes his glasses up on his nose (already the gesture feels perfectly familiar, although he has worn contact lenses for twenty years) and thinks with some amazement that the atmosphere has changed in the room while Mike recalled the incident with the bird out at the Ironworks and reminded them about his fatherโ€™s photograph album and the picture that had moved.

Richie had felt a mad, exhilarating kind of energy growing in the room.

He had done cocaine nine or ten times over the last couple of yearsโ€”at parties, mostly; coke wasnโ€™t something you wanted just lying around your

house if you were a bigga-time disc jockeyโ€”and the feel was something like that, but not exactly. This feeling was purer, more of a mainline high. He thought he recognized the feeling from his childhood, when he had felt it

every day and had come to take it merely as a matter of course. He supposed that, if he had ever thought about that deep-running aquifer of

energy as a kid (he could not recall that he ever had), he would have simply dismissed it as a fact of life, something that would always be there, like the color of his eyes or his disgusting hammertoes.

Well, that hadnโ€™t turned out to be true. The energy you drew on so

extravagantly when you were a kid, the energy you thought would never exhaust itselfโ€”that slipped away somewhere between eighteen and twenty- four, to be replaced by something much duller, something as bogus as a

coke high: purpose, maybe, or goals, or whatever rah-rah Junior Chamber of Commerce word you wanted to use. It was no big deal; it didnโ€™t go all at once, with a bang. And maybe, Richie thought, thatโ€™s the scary part. How you donโ€™t stop being a kid all at once, with a big explosive bang, like one of

that clownโ€™s trick balloons with the Burma-Shave slogans on the sides. The kid in you just leaked out, like the air out of a tire. And one day you looked in the mirror and there was a grownup looking back at you. You could go on wearing bluejeans, you could keep going to Springsteen and Seger concerts, you could dye your hair, but that was a grownupโ€™s face in the

mirror just the same. It all happened while you were asleep, maybe, like a visit from the Tooth Fairy.

No,ย he thinks.ย Not the Tooth Fairy. The Age Fairy.

He laughs aloud at the stupid extravagance of this image, and when

Beverly looks at him questioningly, he waves a hand at her. โ€œNothing, babe, โ€ he says. โ€œJust thinkin me thinks. โ€

But now that energy is back. No, not all the way backโ€”not yet, anywayโ€” but coming back. And itโ€™s not just him; he can feel it filling the room. Mike

looks okay to Richie for the first time since they all got together for that

hideous lunch out by the mall. When Richie walked into the lobby and saw Mike sitting there with Ben and Eddie, he thought, shocked: Thereโ€™s a man whoโ€™s going crazy, getting ready to commit suicide, maybe. But that look is gone now. Not just sublimated; gone. Richie has sat right here and watched the last of it slip out of Mikeโ€™s face while he relived the experience of the

bird and the album. Heโ€™s been energized. And it is the same with all of them. Itโ€™s in their faces, their voices, theirย gestures.

Eddie pours himself another gin-and-prune-juice. Bill knocks back some bourbon, and Mike cracks another beer. Beverly glances up at the balloons Bill has tethered to the microfilm recorder at the main desk and finishes her third screwdriver in a hurry. They have all been drinking pretty

enthusiastically, but none of them are drunk. Richie doesnโ€™t know where that energy he feels is coming from, but itโ€™s not out of a liquor bottle.

DERRY NIGGERS GET THE BIRD: Blue.

THE LOSERS ARE STILL LOSING, BUT STANLEY URIS IS FINALLY

AHEAD: Orange.

Christ,ย Richie thinks, opening a fresh beer for himself.ย it isnโ€™t bad enough It can be any damn monster It wants to be, and it isnโ€™t bad enough that It can feed off our fears. It also turns out to be Rodney Dangerfield in drag.

Itโ€™s Eddie who breaks the silence. โ€œHow much do you think It knows about what weโ€™re doing now? โ€ he asks.

โ€œIt was here, wasnโ€™t It? โ€ Ben says.

โ€œIโ€™m not sure that means much, โ€ Eddie replies.

Bill nods. โ€œThose are just images, โ€ he says. โ€œIโ€™m not sure that means It can see us, or know what weโ€™re up to. You can see a news commentator on TV, but he canโ€™t see you. โ€

โ€œThose balloons arenโ€™t just images, โ€ Beverly says, and jerks a thumb over her shoulder at them. โ€œTheyโ€™re real. โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s not true, though, โ€ Richie says, and they all look at him. โ€œImages are real. Sure they are. Theyโ€”โ€

And suddenly something else clicks into place, something new: it clicks into place with such firm force that he actually puts his hands to his ears. His eyes widen behind his glasses.

โ€œOh my God!โ€ he cries suddenly. He gropes for the table, half-stands, then falls back into his chair with a boneless thud. He knocks his can of beer over reaching for it, picks it up, and drinks whatโ€™s left. He looks at Mike while the others look at him, startled and concerned.

โ€œThe burning!โ€ he almost shouts. โ€œThe burning in my eyes! Mike! The burning inย myย eyesโ€”โ€

Mike is nodding, smiling a little.

โ€œR-Richie? โ€ Bill asks. โ€œWhat i-is it? โ€

But Richie barely hears him. The force of the memory sweeps through him like a tide, turning him alternately hot and cold, and he suddenly

understands why these memories have come back one at a time. If he had remembered everything at once, the force would have been like a psychological shotgun blast let off an inch from his temple. It would have torn off the whole top of his head.

โ€œWe saw It come!โ€ he says to Mike. โ€œWe saw It come, didnโ€™t we? You and me . . . or was it just me? โ€ He grabs Mikeโ€™s hand, which lies on the table. โ€œDid you see it too, Mikey, or was it just me? Did you see it? The forest

fire? The crater? โ€

โ€œI saw it, โ€ Mike says quietly, and squeezes Richieโ€™s hand. Richie closes his eyes for a moment, thinking he has never felt such a warm and powerful wave of relief in his life, not even when the PSA jet he had taken from L. A. to San Francisco skidded off the runway and just stoppedย there-nobodyย killed, nobodyย evenย hurt. Some luggage had fallen out of the overhead bins and that was all. He had jumped onto the yellow emergency slide and had helped a woman away from the plane. The woman had turned her ankle on

a hummock concealed in the high grass. She was laughing and saying, โ€œI canโ€™t believe Iโ€™m not dead, I canโ€™t believe it, I just canโ€™t believe it. โ€ So Richie, who was half-carrying the woman with one arm and waving with the other to the firemen who were making frantic come-on gestures to the deplaning passengers, said: โ€œOkay, youโ€™re dead, youโ€™re dead, you feel

better now? โ€ and they both laughed crazily. That had been relief-laughter .

. . but this relief is greater.

โ€œWhat are you guys talking about? โ€ Eddie asks, looking from one to the other.

Richie looks at Mike, but Mike shakes his head. โ€œYou go ahead, Richie.

Iโ€™ve had my say for the evening. โ€

โ€œThe rest of you donโ€™t know or maybe donโ€™t remember, because you left, โ€ Richie tells them. โ€œMe and Mikey, we were the last two Injuns in the smoke- hole. โ€

โ€œThe smoke-hole, โ€ Bill muses. His eyes are far and blue.

โ€œThe burning sensation in my eyes, โ€ Richie says, โ€œunder my contact lenses. I felt it for the first time right after Mike called me in California. I didnโ€™t know what it was then, but I do now. It was smoke. Smoke that was twenty-seven years old. โ€ He looks at Mike. โ€œPsychological, would you say? Psychosomatic? Something from the subconscious? โ€

โ€œI would say not, โ€ Mike answers quietly. โ€œI would say that what you felt was as real as those balloons, or the head I saw in the icebox, or the corpse of Tony Tracker that Eddie saw. Tell them, Richie. โ€

Richie says: โ€œIt was four or five days after Mike brought his dadโ€™s album down to the Barrens. Sometime just after the middle of July, I guess. The

clubhouse was done. But . . . the smoke-hole thing, that was your idea, Haystack. You got it out of one of your books. โ€

Smiling a little, Ben nods.

Richie thinks:ย It was overcast that day. No breeze. Thunder in the air. Like the day a month or so later when we stood in the stream and made a circle and Stan cut our hands with that chunk of Coke bottle. The air was just sitting there, waiting for something to happen, and later Bill said that was why it got so bad in there so quick, because there was no draft.

July 17th. Yes, that was it, that had been the day of the smoke-hole. July 17th, 1958, almost a month after summer vacation began and the nucleus of the Losersโ€”Bill, Eddie, and Benโ€”had formed down in the Barrens.ย Let me

look up the weather forecast for that day almost twenty-seven years ago,ย Richie thinks,ย and Iโ€™ll tell you what it said before I even read it: Richard Tozier, aka the Great Mentalizer. โ€œHot, humid, chance of thundershowers. And watch out for the visions that may come while youโ€™re down in the smoke-hole. โ€

It had been two days after the body of Jimmy Cullum was discovered, the day after Mr. Nell had come down to the Barrens again and sat right on the clubhouse without knowing it was there, because by then they had capped it off and Ben himself had carefully overseen the application of the Tangle-

Track and replacement of the sod. Unless you got right down on your hands and knees and crawled around, youโ€™d have no idea anything was there. Like the dam, Benโ€™s clubhouse had been a roaring success, but this time Mr. Nell didnโ€™t know anything about it.

He had questioned them carefully, officially, taking down their answers in his black notebook, but there had been little they could tell himโ€”at least about Jimmy Cullumโ€”and Mr. Nell had gone away again, after reminding

them once more that they were not to play in the Barrens aloneย ever.

Richie guessed that Mr. Nell would have told them simply to get out if

anyone in the Derry Police Department had really believed that the Cullum boy (or any of the others) had actually been killed in the Barrens. But they knew better; because of the sewer and stormdrain system, that was simply where the remains tended to finish up.

Mr. Nell had come on the 16th, yes, a hot and humid day also, but sunny.

The 17th had been overcast.

โ€œAre you going to talk to us or not, Richie? โ€ Bev asks. She is smiling a little, her lips full and a pale rose-red, her eyes alight.

โ€œIโ€™m just thinking about where to start, โ€ Richie says. He takes his

glasses off, wipes them on his shirt, and suddenly he knows where: with the ground opening up at his and Billโ€™s feet. Of course he knew about the clubhouseโ€”so did Bill and the rest of themโ€”but it still freaked him out, seeing the ground suddenly open on a slit of darkness like that.

He remembers Bill riding him double on the back of Silver to the usual

place on Kansas Street and then stowing his bike under the little bridge. He remembers the two of them walking along the path toward the clearing,

sometimes having to turn sideways because the brush was so thickโ€”it was midsummer now, and the Barrens were at that yearโ€™s apogee of lushness. He

remembers swatting at the mosquitoes that hummed maddeningly close to

their ears; he even remembers Bill saying (oh how clearly it all comes back, not as if it happened yesterday, but as if it is happening now), โ€œH-H-Hold it a s-s-s-

2

-econd, Ruh-Richie. Thereโ€™s a damn guh-guh-hood one on the b-back of your neh-neck. โ€

โ€œOh Christ, โ€ Richie said. He hated mosquitoes. Little flying vampires thatโ€™s all they were when you got right down to the facts. โ€œKill it, Big Bill. โ€

Bill swatted the back of Richieโ€™s neck. โ€œOuch!โ€

โ€œSuh-suh-see? โ€

Bill held his hand in front of Richieโ€™s face. There was a broken mosquito body in the center of an irregular patch of blood.ย My blood,ย Richie thought,ย which was shed for you and for many.ย โ€œYeeick, โ€ he said.

โ€œD-Donโ€™t w-worry, โ€ Bill said. โ€œLiโ€™l fuckerโ€™ll neh-never dance the tuh- tuh-tango again. โ€

They walked on, slapping at mosquitoes, waving at the clouds of

noseeums attracted by something in the smell of their sweatโ€”something which would years later be identified as โ€œpheromones. โ€ Whatever they were.

โ€œBill, when you gonna tell the rest of em about the silver bullets? โ€

Richie asked as they approached the clearing. In this case โ€œthe rest of themโ€ meant Bev, Eddie, Mike, and Stanโ€”although Richie guessed Stan already had a good idea of what they were studying up on down at the Public Library. Stan was sharpโ€”too sharp for his own good, Richie sometimes thought. The day Mike brought his fatherโ€™s album down to the Barrens Stan had almost flipped out. Richie had, in fact, been nearly convinced that they wouldnโ€™t see Stan again and the Losersโ€™ Club would become a s*xtet (a word Richie liked a lot, always with the emphasis on the first syllable). But Stan had been back the next day, and Richie had respected him all the more for that. โ€œYou going to tell them today? โ€

โ€œNuh-not t-today, โ€ Bill said.

โ€œYou donโ€™t think theyโ€™ll work, do you? โ€

Bill shrugged, and Richie, who maybe understood Bill Denbrough better than anyone ever would until Audra Phillips, suspected all the things Bill might have said if not for the roadblock of his speech impediment: that kids making silver bullets was boysโ€™-book stuff, comic-book stuff. In a word,

it was crap. Dangerous crap. They could try it, yeah. Ben Hanscom might even be able to bring it off, yeah. In a movie itย wouldย work, yeah. But . . .

โ€œSo? โ€

โ€œI got an i-i-i-idea, โ€ Bill said. โ€œSimpler. But only if Beh-Beh-Beverlyโ€”โ€ โ€œIf Beverly what? โ€

โ€œNeh-hever mind. โ€

And Bill would say no more on the subject.

They came into the clearing. If you looked closely, you might have thought that the grass there had a slightly matted lookโ€”a slightlyย usedย look. You might even have thought that there was something a bit artificialโ€” almost arrangedโ€” about the scatter of leaves and pine needles on top of the sods. Bill picked up a Ring-Ding wrapperโ€”Benโ€™s, almost certainlyโ€”and put it absently in his pocket.

The boys crossed to the center of the clearing and a piece of ground

about ten inches long by three inches wide swung up with a dirty squall of hinges, revealing a black eyelid. Eyes looked out of that blackness, giving Richie a momentary chill. But they were only Eddie Kaspbrakโ€™s eyes, and it was Eddie, whom he would visit in the hospital a week later, who intoned hollowly: โ€œWhoโ€™s that trip-trapping on my bridge? โ€

Giggles from below, and a flashlight flicker.

โ€œThees ees theย rurales,ย senhorr, โ€ Richie said, squatting down, twirling an invisible mustache, and speaking in his Pancho Vanilla Voice.

โ€œYeah? โ€ Beverly asked from below. โ€œLetโ€™s see your badges. โ€

โ€œBatches? โ€ย Richie cried, delighted. โ€œWe doan need no stinkinย batches!โ€

โ€œGo to hell, Pancho, โ€ Eddie replied, and slammed the big eyelid closed.

There were more muffled giggles from below.

โ€œCome out with your hands up!โ€ย Bill cried in a low, commanding adult voice. He began to tramp back and forth across the sod-covered cap of the clubhouse. He could see the ground springing up and down with his back- and-forth passage, but just barely; they had built well.ย โ€œYou havenโ€™t got a

chance!โ€ย he bellowed, seeing himself as fearless Joe Friday of the L. A. P.

D. in his mindโ€™s eye.ย โ€œCome on out of there, punks! Or weโ€™ll come in SHOOTIN!โ€

He jumped up and down once to emphasize his point. Screams and

giggles from below. Bill was smiling, unaware that Richie was looking at him wiselyโ€”looking at him not as one child looks at another but, in that brief moment, as an adult looks at a child.

He doesnโ€™t know that he doesnโ€™t always,ย Richie thought.

โ€œLet them in, Ben, before they crash the roof in, โ€ Bev said. A moment later a trapdoor flopped open like the hatch of a submarine. Ben looked out. He was flushed. Richie knew at once that Ben had been sitting next to Beverly.

Bill and Richie dropped down through the hatch and Ben closed it again.

Then there they all were, sitting snug against board walls with their legs drawn up, their faces dimly revealed in the beam of Benโ€™s flashlight.

โ€œS-S-So wh-whatโ€™s g-g-going o-on? โ€ Bill asked.

โ€œNot too much, โ€ Ben said. He was indeed sitting next to Beverly, and his face looked happy as well as flushed. โ€œWe were justโ€”โ€

โ€œTell em, Ben, โ€ Eddie interrupted. โ€œTell em the story! See what they think. โ€

โ€œWouldnโ€™t do much for your asthma, โ€ Stan told Eddie in his best someone-has-to-be-practical-here tone of voice.

Richie sat between Mike and Ben, holding his knees in his linked hands. It was delightfully cool down here, delightfullyย secret.ย Following the gleam of the flashlight as it moved from face to face, he temporarily forgot what had so astounded him outside only a minute ago. โ€œWhat are you talkin

about? โ€

โ€œOh, Ben was telling us a story about this Indian ceremony, โ€ Bev said. โ€œBut Stanโ€™s right, it wouldnโ€™t be very good for your asthma, Eddie. โ€

โ€œIt might not bother it, โ€ Eddie said, soundingโ€”to his credit, Richie thoughtโ€”only a little uneasy. โ€œUsually itโ€™s only when I get upset. Anyway, Iโ€™d like to try it. โ€

โ€œTry w-w-what? โ€ Bill asked him.

โ€œThe Smoke-Hole Ceremony, โ€ Eddie said. โ€œW-W-Whatโ€™s th-that? โ€

The beam of Benโ€™s flashlight drifted upward and Richie followed it with his eyes. It tracked aimlessly across the wooden roof of their clubhouse as Ben explained. It crossed the gouged and splintered panels of the mahogany door the seven of them had carried back here from the dump three days ago

โ€”the day before the body of Jimmy Cullum was discovered. The thing

Richie remembered about Jimmy Cullum, a quiet little boy who also wore spectacles, was that he liked to play Scrabble on rainy days.ย Not going to be playing Scrabble anymore,ย Richie thought, and shivered a little. In the

dimness no one saw the shiver, but Mike Hanlon, sitting shoulder to shoulder with him, glanced at him curiously.

โ€œWell, I got this book out of the library last week, โ€ Ben was saying.

โ€œGhosts of the Great Plains,ย itโ€™s called, and itโ€™s all about the Indian tribes that lived out west a hundred and fifty years ago. The Paiutes and the

Pawnees and the Kiowas and the Otoes and the Commanches. It was really a good book. Iโ€™d love to go out there sometime to where they lived. Iowa, Nebraska, Colorado, Utah . . . โ€

โ€œShut up and tell about the Smoke-Hole Ceremony, โ€ Beverly said, elbowing him.

โ€œSure, โ€ he said. โ€œRight. โ€ And Richie believed his response would have been the same if Beverly had given him the elbow and said, โ€œDrink the poison now, Ben, okay? โ€

โ€œSee, almost all those Indians had a special ceremony, and our clubhouse made me think of it. Whenever they had to make a big decisionโ€”whether to move on after the buffalo herds, or to find fresh water, or whether or not to fight their enemiesโ€”theyโ€™d dig a big hole in the ground and cover it up with branches, except for a little vent in the top. โ€

โ€œThe smuh-smuh-smoke-hole, โ€ Bill said.

โ€œYour quick mind never ceases to amaze me, Big Bill, โ€ Richie said gravely. โ€œYou ought to go onย Twenty-One.ย Iโ€™ll bet you could even beat ole Charlie Van Doren. โ€

Bill made as if to hit him and Richie recoiled, bumping his head a pretty good one on a piece of shoring.

โ€œOuch!โ€

โ€œYou d-deserved it, โ€ Bill said.

โ€œI keel you, rotten gringo sumbeesh, โ€ Richie said. โ€œWe doan need no stinkinโ€”โ€

โ€œWill you guys stop it? โ€ Beverly asked. โ€œThis isย interesting.ย โ€ And she favored Ben with such a warm look that Richie believed steam would start curling out of Haystackโ€™s ears in a couple of minutes.

โ€œOkay, B-B-Ben, โ€ Bill said. โ€œGo o-o-on. โ€

โ€œSure, โ€ Ben said. The word came out in a croak. He had to clear his throat and start again. โ€œWhen the smoke-hole was finished, theyโ€™d start a

fire down there. Theyโ€™d use green wood so it would be a reallyย smokyย fire. Then all the braves would go down there and sit around the fire. The place would fill up with smoke. The book said this was a religious ceremony, but it was also kind of a contest, you know? After half a day or so most of the braves would bug out because they couldnโ€™t stand the smoke anymore, and only two or three would be left. And they were supposed to have visions. โ€

โ€œYeah, if I breathed smoke for five or six hours, Iโ€™d probably have some visions, all right, โ€ Mike said, and they all laughed.

โ€œThe visions were supposed to tell the tribe what to do, โ€ Ben said. โ€œAnd I donโ€™t know if this part is true or not, but the book said that most times the visions were right. โ€

A silence fell and Richie looked at Bill. He was aware that they wereย all

looking at Bill, and he had the feelingโ€”againโ€”that Benโ€™s story of the

smoke-hole was more than a thing you read about in a book and then had to try for yourself, like a chemistry experiment or a magic trick. He knew it, they all knew it. Perhaps Ben knew it most of all. This was something they wereย supposedย to do.

They were supposed to have visions.ย Most times the visions were

right.

Richie thought:ย Iโ€™ll bet if we asked him, Haystack would tell us that book practically jumped into his hand. Like something wanted him to readย that

one particular bookย and then tell us about the smoke-hole ceremony.

Because thereโ€™s a tribe right here, isnโ€™t there? Yeah. Us. And, yeah, I guess we do need to know what happens next.

This thought led to another:ย Was thisย supposedย to happen? From the time Ben got the idea for an underground clubhouse instead of a treehouse, was thisย supposedย to happen? How much of this are we thinking up ourselves, and how much is being thought up for us?

In a way, he supposed such an idea should have been almost comforting.

It was nice to imagine that something bigger than you,ย smarterย than you,

was doing your thinking for you, like the adults that planned your meals, bought your clothes, and managed your timeโ€”and Richie was convinced that the force that had brought them together, the force that had used Ben as its messenger to bring them the idea of the smoke-hole-that force wasnโ€™t the same as the one killing the children. This was some kind of counterforce to that other . . . to

(oh well you might as well say it)

It. But all the same, he didnโ€™t like this feeling of not being in control of his own actions, of being managed, of beingย run.

They all looked at Bill; they all waited to see what Bill would say. โ€œY-You nuh-nuh-know, โ€ he said, โ€œthat sounds rih-really n-neat. โ€ Beverly sighed and Stan stirred uncomfortably . . . that was all.

โ€œRih-rih-really nuh-neat, โ€ Bill repeated, looking down at his hands, and perhaps it was only the uneasy flashlight beam in Benโ€™s hands or his own imagination, but Richie thought Bill looked a little pale and a lot scared, although he was smiling. โ€œMaybe we could u-use a vih-hision to tell us what to d-d-do about o-our pruh-pruh-hoblem. โ€

And if anyone has a vision,ย Richie thought,ย it will be Bill.ย But about that he was wrong.

โ€œWell, โ€ Ben said, โ€œit probably only works for Indians, but it might be flippy to try it. โ€

โ€œYeah, weโ€™ll probably all pass out from the smoke and die in here, โ€ Stan said gloomily. โ€œThatโ€™d be really flippy, all right. โ€

โ€œYou donโ€™t want to, Stan? โ€ Eddie asked.

โ€œWell, I sort of do, โ€ Stan said. He sighed. โ€œI think you guys are making me crazy, you know it? โ€ He looked at Bill.

โ€œWhen? โ€

Bill said, โ€œW-Well, nuh-no t-time like the puh-puh-puh-hresent, i-is there? โ€

There was a startled, thoughtful silence. Then Richie got to his feet, straight-arming the trapdoor open and letting in the muted light of that still summer day.

โ€œI got my hatchet, โ€ Ben said, following him out. โ€œWho wants to help me cut some green wood? โ€

In the end they all helped.

3

It took them about an hour to get ready. They cut four or five armloads of small green branches, from which Ben had stripped the twigs and leaves. โ€œTheyโ€™ll smoke, all right, โ€ he said. โ€œI donโ€™t even know if weโ€™ll be able to get them going. โ€

Beverly and Richie went down to the bank of the Kenduskeag and brought back a collection of good-sized stones, using Eddieโ€™s jacket (his mother always made him take a jacket, even if itย wasย eighty degreesโ€”it might rain, Mrs. Kaspbrak said, and if you have a jacket to put on, your skin wonโ€™t get soaked if it does) as a makeshift sling. Carrying the rocks back to the clubhouse, Richie said: โ€œYou canโ€™t do this, Bev. Youโ€™re a girl. Ben said it was just the braves that went down in the smoke-hole, not the squaws. โ€

Beverly paused, looking at Richie with mixed amusement and irritation. A lock of hair had escaped from her ponytail; she pushed out her lower lip and blew it off her forehead.

โ€œI could wrestle you to a fall any day, Richie. And you know it. โ€

โ€œDatย doan mattuh, Miss Scawlett!โ€ Richie said, popping his eyes at her. โ€œYou is still a girl and you is alwaysย goanย be a girl! You sho ainโ€™t no Injun brave!โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll be a bravette, then, โ€ Beverly said. โ€œNow are we going to take these rocks back to the clubhouse or am I going to bounce a few of them off your asshole skull? โ€

โ€œLawks-a-mussy, Miss Scawlett, I ainโ€™t got no asshole in mahย skull!โ€ย Richie screeched, and Beverly laughed so hard she dropped her end of Eddieโ€™s jacket and all the stones fell out. She scolded Richie all the time

they were picking them up again, and Richie joked and screeched in many Voices, and thought to himself how beautiful she was.

Although Richie had not been serious when he spoke of excluding her from the smoke-hole on the basis of her s*x, Bill Denbrough apparently was.

She stood facing him, her hands on her hips, her cheeks flushed with anger. โ€œYou can just take that and stuff it with a long pole, Stuttering Bill! Iโ€™m in on this too, or arenโ€™t I a member of your lousy club anymore? โ€

Patiently, Bill said: โ€œI-Itโ€™s not I-like that, B-B-Bev, and y-you nuh-know i-it. Somebodyย hasย to stay u-uh-up here. โ€

โ€œWhy? โ€

Bill tried, but the roadblock was in again. He looked at Eddie for help. โ€œItโ€™s what Stan said, โ€ Eddie told her quietly. โ€œAbout the smoke. Bill says

that might really happenโ€”we could pass out down there. Then weโ€™d die. Bill says thatโ€™s what happens to most people in housefires. They donโ€™t burn up. They choke to death on the smoke. Theyโ€”โ€

Now she turned to Eddie. โ€œWell, okay. He wants somebody to stay up on top in case thereโ€™s trouble? โ€

Miserably, Eddie nodded.

โ€œWell, what aboutย you?ย Youโ€™re the one with the asthma. โ€

Eddie said nothing. She turned back to Bill. The others stood around, hands in their pockets, looking at their sneakers.

โ€œItโ€™s because Iโ€™m a girl, isnโ€™t it? Thatโ€™s really it, isnโ€™t it? โ€ โ€œBeh-Beh-Beh-Behโ€”โ€

โ€œYou donโ€™t have to talk, โ€ she snapped. โ€œJust nod your head or shake it.

Yourย headย doesnโ€™t stutter, does it? Is it because Iโ€™m a girl? โ€ Reluctantly, Bill nodded his head.

She looked at him for a moment, her lips trembling, and Richie thought she would cry. Instead, she exploded.

โ€œWell,ย fuck you!โ€ย She whirled around to look at the others, and they flinched from her gaze, so hot it was nearly radioactive. โ€œFuckย allย of you if you think the same thing!โ€ She turned back to Bill and began to talk fast, rapping him with words. โ€œThis is something more than some diddlyshit kidโ€™s game like tag or guns or hide-and-go-seek, andย you know it,ย Bill.

Weโ€™reย supposedย to do this. Thatโ€™sย partย of it. And youโ€™re not going to cut me out just because Iโ€™m a girl. Do you understand? You better, or Iโ€™m leaving right now. And if I go, Iโ€™mย gone.ย For good. You understand? โ€

She stopped. Bill looked at her. He seemed to have regained his calm, but Richie felt afraid. He felt that any chance they had of winning, of finding a way to get to the thing that had killed Georgie Denbrough and the other kids, getting to It and killing It, was now in jeopardy.ย Seven,ย Richie thought.ย Thatโ€™s the magic number. There has to be seven of us. Thatโ€™s the way itโ€™s supposed to be.

A bird sang somewhere; stopped; sang again.

โ€œA-All r-right, โ€ Bill said, and Richie let his breath out. โ€œBut suh-suh- somebody has to s-stay tuh-hopside. Who w-w-wants to d-do it? โ€

Richie thought Eddie or Stan would surely volunteer for this duty, but

Eddie said nothing. Stan stood pale and thoughtful and silent. Mike had his thumbs hooked into his belt like Steve McQueen inย Wanted: Dead or Alive,ย nothing moving but his eyes.

โ€œCuh-cuh-come o-on, โ€ Bill said, and Richie realized that all pretense had gone out of the thing now; Bevโ€™s impassioned speech and Billโ€™s grave, too- old face had seen to that. This was a part of it, perhaps as dangerous as the expedition he and Bill had made to the house at 29 Neibolt Street. They

knew it . . . and no one was backing down. Suddenly he was very proud of them, very proud to be with them. After all the years of being counted out, he was counted in. Finally counted in. He didnโ€™t know if they were still

losers or not, but he knew they were together. They were friends. Damn good friends. Richie took his glasses off and rubbed them vigorously with the tail of his shirt.

โ€œI know how to do it, โ€ Bev said, and took a book of matches from her pocket. On the front, so tiny youโ€™d need a magnifying glass to get a really good look at them, were pictures of that yearโ€™s candidates for the title of Miss Rheingold. Beverly lit a match and then blew it out. She tore out six more and added the burned match. She turned away from them, and when she turned back the white ends of the seven matches poked out of her

closed fist. โ€œPick, โ€ she said, holding the matches out to Bill. โ€œThe one who picks the match with the burned head stays up here and pulls the rest out if they go flippy. โ€

Bill looked at her levelly. โ€œTh-This is h-h-how you w-want i-it? โ€

She smiled at him then, and her smile made her face radiant. โ€œYeah, you big dummy, this is how I want it. What about you? โ€

โ€œI luh-luh-love you, B-B-Bev, โ€ he said, and color rose in her cheeks like hasty flames.

Bill did not appear to notice. He studied the match-tails sticking out of her fist, and at length he picked one. Its head was blue and unburned. She turned to Ben and offered the remaining six.

โ€œI love you too, โ€ Ben said hoarsely. His face was plum-colored; he looked like he was on the verge of a stroke. But no one laughed.

Somewhere deeper in the Barrens, the bird sang again.ย Stan would know what it was, Richie thought randomly.

โ€œThank you, โ€ she said, smiling, and Ben picked a match. Its head was unburned.

She offered them to Eddie next. Eddie smiled, a shy smile that was incredibly sweet and almost heartbreakingly vulnerable. โ€œI guess I love you, too, Bev, โ€ he said, and then picked a match blindly. Its head was blue.

Beverly now offered the four match-tails in her hand to Richie.

โ€œAhย lovesย yuh, Miss Scawlett!โ€ Richie screamed at the top of his voice, and made exaggerated kissing gestures with his lips. Beverly only looked at him, smiling a little, and Richie suddenly felt ashamed. โ€œI do love you, Bev, โ€ he said, and touched her hair. โ€œYouโ€™re cool. โ€

โ€œThank you, โ€ she said.

He picked a match and looked at it, positive heโ€™d picked the burned one.

But he hadnโ€™t.

She offered them to Stan.

โ€œI love you, โ€ Stan said, and plucked one of the matches from her fist.

Unburned.

โ€œYou and me, Mike, โ€ she said, and offered him his pick of the two left.

He stepped forward. โ€œI donโ€™t know you well enough to love you, โ€ he said, โ€œbut I love you anyway. You could give my mother shoutin lessons, I guess. โ€

They all laughed, and Mike took a match. Its head was also unburned. โ€œI guess itโ€™s y-y-you a-after all, Bev, โ€ Bill said.

Looking disgustedโ€”all that flash and fire for nothingโ€”Beverly opened her hand.

The head of the remaining match was also blue and unburned. โ€œY-Y-You jih-jig-jiggered them, โ€ Bill accused.

โ€œNo. I didnโ€™t. โ€ Her tone was not one of angry protestโ€”which would

have been suspectโ€”but flabbergasted surprise. โ€œHonest to God I didnโ€™t. โ€

Then she showed them her palm. They all saw the faint mark of soot from the burned match-head there.

โ€œBill, I swear on my motherโ€™s name!โ€

Bill looked at her for a moment and then nodded. By common unspoken consent, they all handed the matches back to Bill. Seven of them, their

heads intact. Stan and Eddie began to crawl around on the ground, but there was no burned match there.

โ€œI didnโ€™t, โ€ย Beverly said again, to no one in particular. โ€œSo what do we do now? โ€ Richie asked.

โ€œWe a-a-all go down, โ€ Bill said. โ€œBecause thatโ€™s w-what w-w-weโ€™reย suh- supposedย to do. โ€

โ€œAnd if we all pass out? โ€ Eddie asked.

Bill looked at Beverly again. โ€œI-If B-Bevโ€™s t-telling the truh-truth, and s- she i-i-is, w-we wonโ€™t. โ€

โ€œHow do youย know? โ€ย Stan asked. โ€œI-I j-just d-d-do. โ€

The bird sang again.

4

Ben and Richie went down first and the others handed the rocks down one by one. Richie passed them on to Ben, who made a small stone circle in the middle of the dirt clubhouse floor. โ€œOkay, โ€ he said. โ€œThatโ€™s enough. โ€

The others came down, each with a handful of the green twigs theyโ€™d cut with Benโ€™s hatchet. Bill came last. He closed the trapdoor and opened the

narrow hinged window. โ€œTh-Th-There, โ€ he said. โ€œTh-thereโ€™s our smuh- smoke-hole. Do we h-have any kih-kih-kindling? โ€

โ€œYou can use this, if you want, โ€ Mike said, and took a battered Archie funnybook out of his hip pocket. โ€œI read it already. โ€

Bill tore the pages out of the funnybook one by one, working slowly and gravely. The others sat around the walls, knee to knee and shoulder to shoulder, watching, not speaking. The tension was thick and still.

Bill laid small twigs and branches over the paper and then looked at Beverly. โ€œY-Y-You g-got the muh-matches, โ€ he said.

She lit one, a tiny yellow flare in the gloom. โ€œDarn thing probably wonโ€™t catch anyway, โ€ she said in a slightly uneven voice, and touched a light to the paper in several places. When the matchflame got close to her fingers, she tossed it into the center.

The flames blazed up yellow, crackling, throwing their faces into sharp relief, and in that moment Richie had no trouble believing Benโ€™s Indian story, and he thought it must have been like this back in those old days when the idea of white men was still no more than a rumor or a tall tale to those Indians who followed buffalo herds so big they could cover the earth from horizon to horizon, herds so big that their passing shook the ground

like an earthquake. In that moment Richie could picture those Indians,

Kiowas or Pawnees or whatever they were, down in their smoke-hole, knee to knee and shoulder to shoulder, watching as the flames guttered and sank into the green wood like hot sores, listening to the faint and steadyย sssssssย of sap oozing out of the damp wood, waiting for the vision to descend.

Yeah. Sitting here now he could believe it all . . . and looking at their somber faces as they studied the flames and the charring pages of Mikeโ€™s Archie funnybook, he could see that they believed it, too.

The branches were catching. The clubhouse began to fill up with smoke.

Some of it, white as cotton smoke-signals in a Saturday-matinee movie starring Randolph Scott or Audie Murphy, escaped from the smoke-hole. But with no moving air outside to create a draft, most of it stayed below. It had an acrid bite that made eyes sting and throats throb. Richie heard Eddie cough twiceโ€”a flat sound like dry boards being whacked togetherโ€”and then fall silent again.ย He shouldnโ€™t be down here,ย he thought . . . but something else apparently felt otherwise.

Bill tossed another handful of green twigs on the smoldering fire and asked in a thin voice that was not much like his usual speaking voice:

โ€œAnyone having a-any vih-vih-visions? โ€

โ€œVisions of getting out of here, โ€ Stan Uris said. Beverly laughed at this, but her laughter turned into a fit of coughing and choking.

Richie leaned his head back against the wall and looked up at the smoke- holeโ€”a thin rectangle of mellow white light. He thought about the Paul Bunyan statue that day in March . . . but that had only been a mirage, a hallucination, aย (vision)

โ€œSmokeโ€™sย killinย me, โ€ Ben said. โ€œWhoo!โ€

โ€œSo leave, โ€ Richie murmured, not taking his eyes off the smoke-hole. He felt as if he was getting a handle on this. He felt as if he had lost ten pounds. And he sure as shit felt as if the clubhouse had gotten bigger. Damn straight on that last. He had been sitting with Ben Hanscomโ€™s fat right leg squashed

against his left one and Bill Denbroughโ€™s bony left shoulder socked into his right arm. Now he was touching neither of them. He glanced lazily to his right and left to verify that his perception was true, and it was. Ben was a foot or so to his left. On his right, Bill was even father away.

โ€œPlace is bigger, friends and neighbors, โ€ he said. He took a deeper breath and coughed hard. It hurt, hurt deep in his chest, the way a cough hurt when you had the flu or the grippe or something. For awhile he thought it would never pass; that he would just go on coughing until they had to pull him out.ย If they still can,ย he thought, but the thought was really too dim to be frightening.

Then Bill was pounding him on the back, and the coughing fit passed.

โ€œYou donโ€™t know you donโ€™t always, โ€ Richie said. He was looking at the smoke-hole again instead of at Bill. How bright it seemed! When he closed his eyes he could still see the rectangle, floating there in the dark, but bright green instead of bright white.

โ€œWhuh-whuh-what do you m-mean? โ€ Bill asked.

โ€œStutter. โ€ He paused, aware that someone else was coughing but not sure who it was.ย โ€œYouย ought to do the Voices, not me, Big Bill. Youโ€”โ€

The coughing got louder. Suddenly the clubhouse was flooded with daylight, so sudden and so bright Richie had to squint against it. He could just make out Stan Uris, climbing and clawing his way out.

โ€œSorry, โ€ Stan managed, through his spasmodic coughing. โ€œSorry, canโ€™t

โ€”โ€

โ€œItโ€™s all right, โ€ Richie heard himself say. โ€œYou doan need no stinkinโ€™ batches. โ€ His voice sounded as if it were coming from a different body.

The trapdoor slammed shut a moment later, but enough fresh air had

come in to clear his head a little. Before Ben moved over a little to fill the space Stan had vacated, Richie became aware of Benโ€™s leg again, pressing his. How had he gotten the idea that the clubhouse had gotten bigger?

Mike Hanlon threw more sticks on the smoky fire. Richie resumed taking shallow breaths and looking up at the smoke-hole. He had no sense of real

time passing, but he was vaguely aware that, in addition to the smoke, the clubhouse was getting good and hot.

He looked around, looked at his friends. They were hard to see, half- swallowed in shadowsmoke and still white summerlight. Bevโ€™s head was tilted back against a piece of shoring, her hands on her knees, her eyes

closed, tears trickling down her cheeks toward her earlobes. Bill was sitting cross-legged, his chin on his chest. Ben wasโ€”

But suddenly Ben was getting to his feet, pushing the trapdoor open again.

โ€œThere goes Ben, โ€ Mike said. He was sitting Indian-fashion directly across from Richie, his eyes as red as a weaselโ€™s.

Comparative coolness struck them again. The air freshened as smoke swirled up through the trap. Ben was coughing and dry-retching. He pulled himself out with Stanโ€™s help, and before either of them could close the trapdoor, Eddie was staggering to his feet, his face a deadly pale except for the bruised-looking patches under his eyes and traced just below his cheekbones. His thin chest was hitching up and down in quick, shallow spasms. He groped weakly for the edge of the escape hatch and would have fallen if Ben had not grabbed one hand and Stan the other.

โ€œSorry, โ€ Eddie managed in a squeaky little whisper, and then they hauled him up. The trapdoor banged down again.

There was a long, quiet period. The smoke built up until it was a thick still fog in the clubhouse.ย Looks like a pea-souper to me, Watson,ย Richie thought, and for a moment he imagined himself as Sherlock Holmes (a

Holmes who looked a great deal like Basil Rathbone and who was totally black and white), moving purposefully along Baker Street; Moriarty was somewhere near, a hansom cab awaited, and the game was afoot.

The thought was amazingly clear, amazinglyย solid.ย It seemed almost to have weight, as if it were not a little pocket-daydream of the sort he had all the time (batting cleanup for the Bosox, bottom of the ninth, bases loaded,ย and there it goes, itโ€™s up . . . ITโ€™S GONE! Home run, Tozier . . . and that

breaks the Babeโ€™s record!),ย but something that was almostย real.

There was still enough of the wiseacre in him to think that if all he was getting out of this was a vision of Basil Rathbone as Sherlock Holmes, then the whole idea of visions was pretty overrated.

Except of course it isnโ€™t Moriarty thatโ€™s out there. Itโ€™s out thereโ€”some It

โ€”and Itโ€™s real. Itโ€”

Then the trapdoor opened again and Beverly was struggling her way out, coughing dryly, one hand cupped over her mouth. Ben got one hand and Stan grabbed her under the other arm. Half-pulled, half-scrambling under her own power, she was up and gone.

โ€œIh-Ih-It i-is bi-higger, โ€ Bill said.

Richie looked around. He saw the circle of stones with the fire smoldering within, fuming out clouds of smoke. Across the way he saw Mike sitting cross-legged like a totem carved from mahogany, staring at

him though the fire with his smoke-reddened eyes. Except Mike was better than twenty yards away, and Bill was even farther away, on Richieโ€™s right. The underground clubhouse was now at least the size of a ballroom.

โ€œDoesnโ€™t matter, โ€ Mike said. โ€œItโ€™s gonna come pretty quick.ย Somethinย is.

โ€

โ€œY-Y-Yeah, โ€ Bill said. โ€œBut I . . . I . . . Iโ€”โ€

He began to cough. He tried to control it, but the cough worsened, a dry

rattling. Dimly Richie saw Bill stumble to his feet, lunge for the trapdoor, and shove it open.

โ€œGuh-Guh-Good luh-luh-luhโ€”โ€

And then he was gone, dragged up by the others.

โ€œLooks like itโ€™s you and me, ole Mikey, โ€ Richie said, and then he began to cough himself. โ€œI thought for sure that it would be Billโ€”โ€

The cough worsened. He doubled over, hacking dryly, unable to get his breath. His head was thuddingโ€”whackingโ€”like a turnip filled with blood. His eyes teared behind his glasses.

From far away, he heard Mike saying: โ€œGo on up if you have to, Richie.

Donโ€™t go flippy. Donโ€™t kill yourself. โ€

He raised a hand toward Mike and flapped it at him

(no stinkin batches)

in a negative gesture. Little by little he began to get the coughing under control again. Mike was right; something was going to happen, and soon. He wanted to still be here when it did.

He tilted his head back and looked up at the smoke-hole again. The coughing fit had left him feeling light-headed, and now he seemed to be floating on a cushion of air. It was a pleasant feeling. He took shallow

breaths and thought:ย Someday Iโ€™m going to be a rock-and-roll star. Thatโ€™s it, yes. Iโ€™ll be famous. Iโ€™ll make records and albums and movies. Iโ€™ll have a

black sportcoat and white shoes and a yellow Cadillac. And when I come back to Derry, theyโ€™ll all eat their hearts out, even Bowers. I wear glasses, but what the fuck? Buddy Holly wears glasses. Iโ€™ll bop till Iโ€™m blue and

dance till Iโ€™m black. Iโ€™ll be the first rock-and-roll star to ever come from Maine. Iโ€™llโ€”

The thought drifted away. It didnโ€™t matter. He found that now he didnโ€™t need to take shallow breaths. His lungs had adapted. He could breathe as much smoke as he wanted. Maybe he was from Venus.

Mike threw more sticks on the fire. Not to be outdone, Richie tossed on another handful himself.

โ€œHow you feeling, Rich? โ€ Mike asked.

Richie smiled. โ€œBetter. Good, almost. You? โ€

Mike nodded and smiled back. โ€œI feel okay. Have you been having some funny thoughts? โ€

โ€œYeah. Thought I was Sherlock Holmes for a minute there. Then I thought I could dance like the Dovells. Your eyes are so red you wouldnโ€™t believe it, you know it? โ€

โ€œYours too. Just a coupla weasels in the pen, thatโ€™s what we are. โ€ โ€œYeah? โ€

โ€œYeah. โ€

โ€œYou wanna say all right? โ€

โ€œAll right. You wanna say you got the word? โ€ โ€œI got it, Mikey. โ€

โ€œYeah, okay. โ€

They grinned at each other and then Richie let his head tilt back against the wall again and looked up at the smoke-hole. Shortly he began to drift away. No . . . not away.ย Up.ย He was driftingย up.ย Like

(float down here we all)

a balloon.

โ€œYuh-yuh-you g-g-guys all ri-right? โ€

Billโ€™s voice, coming down through the smoke-hole. Coming from Venus.

Worried. Richie felt himself thud back down inside himself.

โ€œAll right, โ€ he heard his voice, distant, irritated. โ€œAll right, weย saidย all right, be quiet, Bill, let us get the word, we wanna say we got the

(world)

word. โ€

The clubhouse was bigger than ever, floored now in some polished wood.

The smoke was fog-thick and it was hard to see the fire. That floor! Jesus- come-please-us! It was as big as a ballroom floor in an MGM musical

extravaganza. Mike looked at him from the other side, a shape almost lost in the fog.

You coming, ole Mikey? Right here with you, Richie.

You still want to say all right?

Yeah. . . but hold my hand. . . can you catch hold? I think so.

Richie held his hand out, and although Mike was on the far side of this enormous room he felt those strong brown fingers close over his wrist. Oh and that was good, that was a good touchโ€”good to find desire in comfort, to find comfort in desire, to find substance in smoke and smoke in substanceโ€”

He tilted his head back and looked at the smoke-hole, so white and wee.

It was farther up now.ย Milesย up. Venusian skylight.

It was happening. He began to float.ย Come on then,ย he thought, and began to rise faster through the smoke, the fog, the mist, whatever it was.

5

They werenโ€™t inside anymore.

The two of them were standing together in the middle of the Barrens, and it was nearly dusk.

It was the Barrens, he knew that, but everything was different. The

foliage was lusher, deeper, savagely fragrant. There were plants he had never seen before, and Richie realized some of the things he had first taken for trees were really giant ferns. There was the sound of running water, but it was much louder than it should have beenโ€”this water sounded not like

the leisurely flow of the Kenduskeag Stream but more the way he imagined the Colorado River would sound as it cut its way through the Grand Canyon.

It was hot, too. Not that it didnโ€™t get hot in Maine during the summer, and humid enough so that sometimes you felt sticky just lying in your bed at night, but this was more heat and more humidity than he had ever felt in his whole life. A low mist, smoky and thick, lay in the hollows of the land and

crept around the boysโ€™ legs. It had a thin acrid smell like burning green wood.

He and Mike began to move toward the sound of the running water without speaking, pushing their way through the strange foliage. Thick ropy lianas lay between some of the trees like spidery hammocks, and once

Richie heard something go crashing off through the underbrush. It sounded bigger than a deer.

He stopped long enough to look around, turning in a circle, studying the horizon. He knew where the Standpipeโ€™s thick white cylinder should have been, but it wasnโ€™t there. Neither was the railroad trestle going over to the

trainyards at the end of Neibolt Street or the Old Cape housing development

โ€”low bluffs and red sandstone outcroppings of rock bulged out of thick stands of giant fern and pine trees where the Old Cape should have been.

There was a flapping noise overhead. The boys ducked as a squadron of bats flapped by. They were the biggest bats Richie had ever seen, and for a moment he was more terrified than he had been even when Bill was trying to get Silver rolling and he had heard the werewolf closing in on them from behind. The stillness and the alienness of this land were both terrible, but its awfulย familiarityย was somehow worse.

No need to be scared, heย told himself.ย Remember that this is just a

dream, or a vision, or whatever you want to call it. Me and ole Mikey are really back in the clubhouse, goofed up on smoke. Pretty soon Big Bill is gonna get noivous from the soivice because weโ€™re not answering anymore,

and he and Ben will come down and haul us out. Itโ€™s just like Conway Twitty saysโ€”only make-believe.

But he couldย seeย howย one of the batsโ€™ wings was so ragged the hazy sun shone through it, and when they passed beneath one of the giant ferns he could see a fat yellow caterpillar trundling across a wide green frond, leaving its shadow behind it. There were tiny black mites jumping and

sizzling on the caterpillarโ€™s body. If this was a dream, it was the clearest one he had ever had.

They went on toward the sound of the water, and in the thick knee-high groundmist, Richie was unable to tell if his feet were touching the ground or not. They came to a place where both the mist and the ground stopped. Richie looked, unbelieving. This was not the Kenduskeagโ€”and yet it was. The stream boiled and roiled through a narrow watercourse cut through that

same crumbly rockโ€”looking across to the far side, he could see ages cut into those stacked layers of stone, red and then orange and then red again. You couldnโ€™t walk across this stream on stepping-stones; youโ€™d need a rope bridge, and if you fell in you would be swept away at once. The sound of

the water was the sound of bitter foolish anger, and as Richie watched, slack-jawed, he saw a pinkish-silver fish jump in an impossibly high arc, snapping at the bugs that made shifting clouds just above the surface of the water. It splashed down again, giving Richie just time enough to register its presence, and to realize he had never seen a fish exactly like that in his

whole life, not even in a book.

Birds flocked across the sky, squalling harshly. Not a dozen or two dozen; for a moment the sky was so dark with birds that they blotted out the sun. Something else crashed through the bushes, and then more things.

Richie wheeled, his heart thudding painfully in his chest, and saw something that looked like an antelope flash by, heading southeast.

Somethingโ€™s going to happen. And they know it.

The birds passed, presumably alighting somewhereย en masseย farther south. Another animal crashed by them . . . and another. Then there was

silence except for the steady rumble of the Kenduskeag. The silence had a waiting quality about it, a pregnant quality Richie didnโ€™t like. He felt the hairs shifting and trying to stand up on the back of his neck and he groped for Mikeโ€™s hand again.

Do you know where we are?ย he shouted at Mike.ย You got the word? Jesus, yes!ย Mike shouted back.ย I got it! This is ago, Richie! Ago!

Richie nodded. Ago, as in once upon a time, long long ago, when we all lived in the forest and nobody lived anywhere else. They were in the

Barrens as they had been God knew how many thousands of years ago. They were in some unimaginable past before the ice age, when New England had been as tropical as South America was today . . . if there stillย wasย a today. He looked around again, nervously, almost expecting to see a

brontosaurus raise its cranelike neck against the sky and stare down at them, its mouth full of mud and dripping uprooted plants, or a saber-toothed tiger come stalking out of the undergrowth.

But there was only that silence, as in the five or ten minutes before a

vicious thundersquall strikes, when the purple heads stack up and up in the sky overhead and the light turns a queer, bruised purple-yellow and the

wind dies completely and you can smell a thick aroma like overcharged car batteries in the air.

Weโ€™re in the ago, a million years back, maybe, or ten million, or eighty million, but here we are and somethingโ€™s going to happen, I donโ€™t know what but something and Iโ€™m scared I want it to end I want to be back and Bill please Bill please pull us out itโ€™s like we fell into the picture some

picture please please helpโ€”

Mikeโ€™s hand tightened on his and he realized that now the silence had been broken. There was a steady low vibrationโ€”he could feel it more than hear it, working against the tight flesh of his eardrums, buzzing the tiny

bones that conducted the sound. It grew steadily. It had no tone; it simply

was:

(the word in the beginning was the word the world the)

a tuneless, soulless sound. He groped for the tree they stood near and as his hand touched it, cupped the curve of the bole, he could feel the vibration caught inside. At the same moment he realized he could feel it in his feet, a steady tingling that went up his ankles and calves to his knees, turning his

tendons into tuning forks.

It grew. And grew.

It was coming out of the sky. Not wanting to but unable to help himself, Richie turned his face up. The sun was a molten coin burning a circle in the low-hanging overcast, surrounded by a fairy-ring of moisture. Below it, the verdant green slash that was the Barrens lay utterly still. Richie thought he understood what this vision was: they were about to see the coming of It.

The vibration took on a voiceโ€”a rumbling roar that built to a shattering crescendo of sound. He clapped his hands to his ears and screamed and could not hear himself scream. Beside him, Mike Hanlon was doing the same, and Richie saw that Mikeโ€™s nose was bleeding a little.

The clouds in the west lit with a bloom of red fire. It traced its way toward them, widening from an artery to a stream to a river of ominous color; and then, as a burning, falling object broke through the cloud cover, the wind came. It was hot and searing, smoky and suffocating. The thing in the sky was gigantic, a flaming match-head that was nearly too bright to look at. Arcs of electricity bolted from it, blue bullwhips that flashed out from it and left thunder in their wake.

A spaceship!ย Richie screamed, falling to his knees and covering his eyes.

Oh my God itโ€™s a spaceship!ย But he believedโ€”and would tell the others later, as best he couldโ€”that it wasย notย a spaceship, although it might have comeย throughย space to get here. Whatever came down on that long-ago day had come from a place much farther away than another star or another galaxy, and ifย spaceshipย was the first word to come into his mind, perhaps that was only because his mind had no other way of grasping what his eyes were seeing.

There was an explosion thenโ€”a roar of sound followed by a rolling concussion that knocked them both down. This time it was Mike who groped for Richieโ€™s hand. There was another explosion. Richie opened his eyes and saw a glare of fire and a pillar of smoke rising into the sky.

It!ย he screamed at Mike, in an ecstasy of terror nowโ€”never in his life,

before or after, would he feel any emotion so deeply, be so overwhelmed by feeling.ย It! It! It!

Mike dragged him to his feet and they ran along the high bank of the young Kenduskeag, never noticing how close they were to the drop. Once Mike stumbled and went skidding to his knees. Then it was Richieโ€™s turn to go down, barking his shin and tearing his pants. The wind had come up and it was pushing the smell of the burning forest toward them. The smoke

grew thicker, and Richie became dimly aware that he and Mike were not running alone. The animals were on the move again, fleeing from the smoke, the fire, the death in the fire. Running from It, perhaps. The new arrival in their world.

Richie began to cough. He could hear Mike beside him, also coughing.

The smoke was thicker, washing out the greens and grays and reds of the day. Mike fell again and Richie lost his hand. He groped for it and could not find it.

Mike!ย He screamed, panicked, coughing.ย Mike, where are you? Mike!

MIKE!

But Mike was gone; Mike was nowhere. richie! richie! richie!

(!!WHACKO!!)

โ€œrichie! richie! richie, are you

6

all right? โ€

His eyes fluttered open and he saw Beverly kneeling beside him, wiping his mouth with a handkerchief. The othersโ€”Bill, Eddie, Stan, and Benโ€” stood behind her, their faces solemn and scared. The side of Richieโ€™s face hurt like hell. He tried to speak to Beverly and could only croak. He tried to clear his throat and almost vomited. His throat and lungs felt as if they had somehow been lined with smoke.

At last he managed, โ€œDid you slap me, Beverly? โ€ โ€œIt was all I could think of to do, โ€ she said. โ€œWhacko, โ€ Richie muttered.

โ€œI didnโ€™t think you were going to be all right, is all, โ€ Bev said, and suddenly burst into tears.

Richie patted her clumsily on the shoulder and Bill put a hand on the back of her neck. She reached around at once, took it, squeezed it.

Richie managed to sit up. The world began to swim in waves. When it steadied down he saw Mike leaning against a tree nearby, his face dazed and ashy-pale.

โ€œDid I puke? โ€ Richie asked Bev. She nodded, still crying.

In a croaking, stumbling Irish Copโ€™s Voice, he asked, โ€œGet any on ye, darlin? โ€

Bev laughed through her tears and shook her head. โ€œI turned you on your side. I was afraid . . . a-a-afraid youโ€™d ch-ch-choke on it. โ€ She began to cry hard again.

โ€œNuh-Nuh-No f-fair, โ€ Bill said, still holding her hand. โ€œI-I-Iโ€™m the one who stuh-huh-hutters a-around h-here. โ€

โ€œNot bad, Big Bill, โ€ Richie said. He tried to get to his feet and sat down again heavily. The world was still swimming. He began to cough and turned his head away, aware that he was going to retch again only a moment before it happened. He threw up a mess of green foam and thick saliva that mostly came out in ropes. He closed his eyes tight and croaked, โ€œAnyone want a

snack? โ€

โ€œOhย shit!โ€ย Ben cried, disgusted and laughing at the same time.

โ€œLooks more like puke to me, โ€ Richie said, although, in truth, his eyes were still tightly shut. โ€œThe shit usually comes out the other end, at least for

me. I dunno about you, Haystack. โ€ When he opened his eyes at last, he saw

the clubhouse about twenty yards away. Both the window and the big trapdoor were thrown open. Smoke, thinning now, puffed from both.

This time Richie was able to get to his feet. For a moment he was quite sure he was going to retch again, or faint, or both. โ€œWhacko, โ€ he murmured, watching the world waver and warp in front of his eyes. When the feeling passed, he made his way over to where Mike was. Mikeโ€™s eyes were still weasel-red, and from the dampness on his pants cuffs, Richie

thought that maybe ole Mikey had taken a ride on the stomach-elevator, too. โ€œFor a white boy you did pretty good, โ€ Mike croaked, and punched

Richie weakly on the shoulder.

Richie was at a loss for wordsโ€”a condition of exquisite rarity. Bill came over. The others came with him.

โ€œYou pulled us out? โ€ Richie asked.

โ€œM-Me and Buh-Ben. Y-You were scuh-scuh-rheaming. B-Both of y-y- you. B-B-Butโ€”โ€ He looked over at Ben.

Ben said, โ€œIt must have been the smoke, Bill. โ€ But there was no conviction in the big boyโ€™s voice at all.

Flatly, Richie said: โ€œYou mean what I think you mean? โ€ Bill shrugged. โ€œW-W-Whatโ€™s th-that, Rih-Richie? โ€

Mike answered. โ€œWe werenโ€™t there at first, were we? You went down because you heard us screaming, but at first we werenโ€™t there. โ€

โ€œIt was really smoky, โ€ Ben said. โ€œHearing you both screaming that way, that was scary enough. But the screaming . . . it sounded . . . well . . . โ€

โ€œIt s-s-sounded very f-f-f-far a-away, โ€ Bill said. Stuttering badly, he told them that when he and Ben had gone down, they hadnโ€™t been able to see either Richie or Mike. They had gone plunging around in the smoky clubhouse, panicked, scared that if they didnโ€™t act quickly the two boys might die of smoke poisoning. At last Bill had gripped a handโ€”Richieโ€™s.

He had given โ€œaย huh-huh-hellย of a yuh-yankโ€ and Richie had come flying out of the gloom, only about one-quarter conscious. When Bill turned around he had seen Ben with Mike in a bear-hug, both of them coughing. Ben had thrown Mike up and out through the trapdoor.

Ben listened to all this, nodding.

โ€œI kept grabbing, you know? Really not doing anything except jabbing my hand out like I wanted to shake hands. You grabbed it, Mike. Damn good thing you grabbed it when you did. I think you were just about gone. โ€

โ€œYou guys make the clubhouse sound a lot bigger than it is, โ€ Richie said. โ€œTalking about stumbling around in it and all. Itโ€™s only five feet on every side. โ€

There was a momentโ€™s silence while they all looked at Bill, who stood in frowning concentration.

โ€œItย w-w-wasย b-bigger, โ€ he said at last. โ€œW-W-Wasnโ€™t it, Ben? โ€ Ben shrugged. โ€œIt sure seemed like it. Unless it was the smoke. โ€

โ€œIt wasnโ€™t the smoke, โ€ Richie said. โ€œJust before it happenedโ€”before we wentย outโ€”Iย remember thinking it was at least as big as a ballroom in a movie. Like one of those musicals.ย Seven Brides for Seven Brothers,ย something like that. I could barely see Mike against the other wall. โ€

โ€œBefore you went out? โ€ Beverly asked. โ€œWell . . . what I mean . . . like . . . โ€

She grabbed Richieโ€™s arm. โ€œIt happened, didnโ€™t it? It really happened!

You had a vision, just like in Benโ€™s book!โ€ Her face was glowing. โ€œIt really

happened!โ€

Richie looked down at himself, and then at Mike. One of the knees of Mikeโ€™s corduroy pants was out, and both the knees of his own jeans were torn. He could look through the holes and see bleeding scrapes on both his knees.

โ€œIf it was a vision, I never want to have another one, โ€ he said. โ€œI donโ€™t know about de Kingfish over there, but when I went down there, I didnโ€™t have any holes in my pants. Theyโ€™re practically new, for gosh sakes. My momโ€™s gonna give me hell. โ€

โ€œWhat happened? โ€ Ben and Eddie asked together.

Richie and Mike exchanged a glance and then Richie said, โ€œBevvie, you got a smoke? โ€

She had two, wrapped in a piece of tissue. Richie put one of them in his mouth and when she lit it the first drag made him cough so badly that he handed it back to her. โ€œCanโ€™t, โ€ he said. โ€œSorry. โ€

โ€œIt was the past, โ€ Mike said.

โ€œShit on that, โ€ Richie said. โ€œIt wasnโ€™t just the past. It wasย ago. โ€

โ€œYeah, right. We were in the Barrens, but the Kenduskeag was going a mile a minute. It was deep. It was fuckinย wild.ย Sorry, Bevvie, but itย was.ย And there were fish in it. Salmon, I think. โ€

โ€œM-My d-d-dad s-says th-there havenโ€™t been a-a-any fuh-fish in the K- Kendusk-k-keag for a l-l-long tuh-hime. B-Because of the suh-sewage. โ€

โ€œThis was a long time, all right, โ€ Richie said. He looked around at them uncertainly. โ€œI think it was a million years ago, at least. โ€

A thunderstruck silence greeted this. Beverly broke it at last. โ€œBut what

happened? โ€

Richie felt the words in his throat, but he had to struggle to bring them out. It felt almost like vomiting again. โ€œWe saw It come, โ€ he said at last. โ€œIย thinkย that was it. โ€

โ€œChrist, โ€ Stan muttered. โ€œOh Christ. โ€

There was a sharp hiss-gasp as Eddie used his aspirator.

โ€œIt came out of the sky, โ€ Mike said. โ€œI never want to see anything like that again in my whole life. It was burning so hot you couldnโ€™t really look at it. And it was thowin off electricity and makin thunder. The noise . . . โ€ He shook his head and looked at Richie. โ€œIt sounded like the end of the world. And when it hit, it started a forest fire. That was at the end of it. โ€

โ€œWas it a spaceship? โ€ Ben asked.

โ€œYes, โ€ Richie said. โ€œNo, โ€ Mike said. They looked at each other.

โ€œWell, I guess it was, โ€ Mike said, and at the same time Ricie said: โ€œNo, it really wasnโ€™t aย spaceship,ย you know, butโ€”โ€

They paused again while the others looked at them, perplexed.

โ€œYou tell, โ€ Richie said to Mike. โ€œWe mean the same thing, I think, but theyโ€™re not getting it. โ€

Mike coughed into his fist and then looked up at the others, almost apologetically. โ€œI donโ€™t know just how to tell you, โ€ he said.

โ€œT-T-Try, โ€ย Bill said urgently.

โ€œIt came out of the sky, โ€ Mike repeated, โ€œbut it wasnโ€™t aย spaceship,ย exactly. It wasnโ€™t a meteor, either. It was more like . . . well . . . like the Ark of the Covenant, in the Bible, that was supposed to have the Spirit of God

inside of it . . . except this wasnโ€™t God. Just feeling It, watching It come, you knew It meant bad, that Itย wasย bad. โ€

He looked at them.

Richie nodded. โ€œIt came from . .ย outside.ย I got that feeling. Fromย outside.

โ€

โ€œOutside where, Richie? โ€ Eddie asked.

โ€œOutside everything, โ€ Richie said. โ€œAnd when It came down . . . It made the biggest damn hole you ever saw in your life. It turned this big hill into a doughnut, just about. It landed right where the downtown part of Derry is

now. โ€

He looked at them. โ€œDo you get it? โ€

Beverly dropped the cigarette half-smoked and crushed it out under one shoe.

Mike said, โ€œItโ€™sย alwaysย been here, since the beginning of time . . . since before there were menย anywhere,ย unless maybe there were just a few of them in Africa somewhere, swinging through the trees or living in caves. The craterโ€™s gone now, and the ice age probably scraped the valley deeper and changed some stuff around and filled the crater in . . . but It was here then, sleeping, maybe, waiting for the ice to melt, waiting for the people to come. โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s why It uses the sewers and the drains, โ€ Richie put in. โ€œThey must be regular freeways for It. โ€

โ€œYou didnโ€™t see what It looked like? โ€ Stan Uris asked abruptly and a little hoarsely.

They shook their heads.

โ€œCan we beat It? โ€ Eddie said in the silence. โ€œA thing like that? โ€ No one answered.

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