Ed stoops, with almost tender care he puts the knife against Shelton’s neck. Shelton glares up at him, this slight silly boy, and he knows there was a time he could have beaten him with his bare fists, but that was long ago, before the grey hairs and the despair. “There’s no help coming, old man,” Ed says. “The circus has packed up and moved on. Didn’t you realise? The circus left town ages ago!” The blade is still so sharp, just the way Shelton kept it for the animals, he hardly notices that it’s cutting into his throat. “Tell me!” Ed roars suddenly. “Where have you hidden my son?”
And Shelton is about to answer. He’s going to make something up. Or he’s going to tell him the truth. Or he’s going to tell Ed to go to hell, and die, and that’s all right too. But he looks away from Ed’s face, he looks across the caravan floor. Ed hesitates, he frowns. Then he turns around too. And they both stare at the open trapdoor.
Ed makes Shelton climb down the ladder first. “Don’t try anything,” he says. “I’m right behind you!” But within a few steps that hardly seems to matter — they are plunged into darkness, up and down are just absurd concepts and just as frightening as the other, and Shelton can’t see Ed as he cries out in panic. Ed demands to know what’s going on. He pleads, he makes threats. “Are you still there?” Ed calls. “Please, say something!” But Shelton refuses to answer, he won’t give Ed that small scrap of comfort.
Further downward they go. It takes longer this time, Shelton thinks, longer than ever before. And that terrifies him, but it also gives him a strange warm buzz of nostalgia. Above he hears Ed whimper as he follows.
Then, suddenly, there’s the blue, and there’s the green! And even though Shelton was expecting them he’s dazzled all the same and has to shield his eyes for a moment. Too long — because when he opens them Ed is beside him, and Ed is raving now, and he jams a hand around Shelton’s throat.
“What is this place? Is this where you hid my son?”
And as he watches Shelton sees the fear fade from Ed’s eyes, and something calmer and madder takes its place.
“It doesn’t matter,” Ed whispers, quite confidentially. “I can kill you here just as easily.”
Even now Shelton thinks that the balloon animals might come and save him. If not as an act of friendship, then at least as payment for services rendered. He tries to twist his head around to see if they’re on their way, the legions of the old and the broken and the weak. But he can’t shake Ed’s grip for long, and he can see there’s no help, not in either direction — maybe that’s the joke of it, the Popping Fields are empty now and they’re all dead and he did his job too well. Ed grips tighter. The blue of the sky is getting darker now, a dark blue, turning to black. Shelton’s eyes roll at the black, with all the colour here it’s a shame that black will be the last thing he sees. And then — then, Ed lets go.
Ed is staring at his hand in horror. It’s now too big to fit around Shelton’s throat, and the distended fingers flop limp and large from the swollen mass of the palm. The other hand is swelling too; Ed drops the knife, either in shock or because he can no longer grip it.
“Please stop it!” he squawks. And it
“Help me,” Ed manages to say. “Help me.”
Joshua Shelton picks up the knife. He can imagine plunging it deep into that balloon body. He can imagine the loud bang it would make. How good it would make him feel. He imagines it all, and he enjoys it. And then he drops the knife to the grass.
“No,” he says, simply. And he walks away.
He doesn’t look around again for a long time, not until Ed’s cries for help can no longer be heard, not until he’s certain he’ll never see Ed again.
On he walks through the Popping Fields.
And in time he realises that he was wrong — that it isn’t just a single green or a single blue. It delights him. He likes looking for all the variations.
Sometimes he gets lonely, but he’s used to that.
When he’s hungry he can bend down and scoop up handfuls of green. It’s good and filling. If he needs a drink, he cups his hands into the air and the blue he brings down is refreshing and cool. He sleeps on a mattress of grass, and the sky is a warm blanket.
He is happy.