They were doing a Lindy variation I knew as the Hellzapoppin. It’s supposed to be a fast dance — lightning-fast, if you have the physical stamina and grace to bring it off — but they were dancing it slow because they were still learning their steps. I could see inside every move. I knew them all, although I hadn’t actually danced any of them in five years or more. Come together, both hands clasped. He stoops a little and kicks with his left foot while she does the same, both of them twisting at the waist so that they appear to be going in opposite directions. Move apart, hands still clasped, then she twirls, first to the left and then to the right—
But they goofed up the return spin and she went sprawling on the grass. “Jesus, Richie, you never get that right!
“I’se sorry, Miss Scawlett!” the boy cried in a screechy pickaninny voice that would have gone over like a lead balloon in the politically correct twenty-first century. “I’se just a clodhoppin country boy, but I intends to learn dis-yere dance if it kills me!”
“I’m the one it’s likely to kill,” she said. “Start the record again before I lose my—” Then they both saw me.
It was a strange moment. There was a veil in Derry — I came to know that veil so well I could almost see it. The locals were on one side; people from away (like Fred Toomey, like me) were on the other. Sometimes the locals came out from behind it, as Mrs. Starrett the librarian had when expressing her irritation about the misplaced census records, but if you asked too many questions — and certainly if you startled them — they retreated behind it again.
Yet I had startled these kids, and they didn’t retreat behind the veil. Instead of closing up, their faces remained wide open, full of curiosity and interest.
“Sorry, sorry,” I said. “Didn’t mean to surprise you. I heard the music and then I saw you lindy-hopping.”
“
“Nice to meet you,” I said. “George Amberson.” And then — it just popped out—“
The girl collapsed on one of the picnic table benches, giggling. The boy raised his hands in the air and bugled: “Strange grown-up gets off a good one! Wacka-wacka-wacka!
“Beep-beep, Richie,” the girl said. She was wiping the corners of her eyes.
This caused an unfortunate reversion to the screeching pickaninny voice. “I’se sorry, Miss Scawlett, don’t be whuppin on me! I’se still got scabs from de las’ time!”
“Who are you, Miss?” I asked.
“Bevvie-Bevvie, I live on the levee,” she said, and started giggling again. “Sorry — Richie’s a fool, but I have no excuse. Beverly Marsh. You’re not from around here, are you?”
A thing everybody seemed to know immediately. “Nope, and you two don’t seem like you are, either. You’re the first two Derry-ites I’ve met who don’t seem… grumpy.”
“Yowza, it’s a grumpy-ass town,” Richie said, and took the tone arm off the record. It had been bumping on the final groove over and over.
“I understand folks’re particularly worried about the children,” I said. “Notice I’m keeping my distance. You guys on grass, me on sidewalk.”
“They weren’t all that worried when the murders were going on,” Richie grumbled. “You know about the murders?”
I nodded. “I’m staying at the Town House. Someone who works there told me.”
“Yeah, now that they’re over, people are all concerned about the kids.” He sat down next to Bevvie who lived on the levee. “But when they were going on, you didn’t hear jack spit.”
“Richie,” she said. “Beep-beep.”
This time the boy tried on a really atrocious Humphrey Bogart imitation. “Well it’s true, schweetheart. And you know it’s true.”
“All that’s over,” Bevvie told me. She was as earnest as a Chamber of Commerce booster. “They just don’t know it yet.”
“
She shrugged as if to say
“But you do know.”
“As a matter of fact, we do,” Richie said. He looked at me challengingly, but behind his mended glasses, that glint of maniacal humor was still in his eyes. I had an idea it never completely left them.
I stepped onto the grass. Neither child fled, screaming. In fact, Beverly shoved over on the bench (elbowing Richie so he would do the same) and made room for me. They were either very brave or very stupid, and they didn’t look stupid.
Then the girl said something that flabbergasted me. “Do I know you? Do