32 • WAKiNG THE DEAD

“HEY, POPSICLE,” JACK Kerouac murmured through Milton’s mental fog. “You done catching cups?”

Milton stirred awake. Jack, Annubis, and Moondog were looking down at him like understudies from the Wizard of Odd.

“Welcome back to the land of the once living!” Moondog exclaimed, staring at him with sightless eyes.

Milton leaned up on his elbows and blinked awake. “What … happened?” he asked.

Annubis patted Milton on the top of the head. “You were unconscious for seven hours.”

“Seven hours!” Milton yelped, bolting up to his full, upright position.

The dog god shook his head until his velvety, chocolate-brown ears flapped.

“Sorry,” Annubis apologized. “For me it was seven hours … for you it was only one. I always forget that.”

Milton looked beyond his small group of friends. Judging from the bleak, desolate tundra of salt dunes and barbed-wire brambles, they were still in the Wastelands. Yet just beyond, in the distance, the smooth, barren landscape slammed abruptly into a steep, rocky crag. At the bottom of the rugged cliff was the mouth of a large dark cave that stared back at Milton like a dead crow’s eye. He looked up into Annubis’s soulful, hangdog face.

“But we were running really fast and then suddenly—”

Milton gasped.

“Lucky!”

Milton’s friends shared the same look of sympathetic knowing.

Finally, Moondog spoke up. “Your energetic connection with your pet … your ferret,” he said, scratching the thick white hair that billowed out from beneath his horned helmet. “For it to cause this kind of reaction must mean that it was abruptly … severed. The connection.”

Milton gazed back and forth between the three faces.

“What do you mean by severed?”

Moondog prodded Jack with eyes that, while incapable of sight, were more than effective at passing the proverbial buck. Jack sighed and ran his fingers through his slicked-back hair.

“Your pet has, like, blown the Stage, dig?” Jack explained.

Milton had known, in his heart, that this was true. Lucky was dead. But actually hearing it made the whole thing feel cruelly real. Sadness churned inside Milton until it became a thick, salty sorrow that gushed out of his eyes. He cried until he felt hollow, numb, and—ultimately—somewhat less than completely awful inside.

Milton gazed up at Jack and Moondog, as if they had suddenly just materialized out of thin air, which to him, in a way, they had.

“What are you two doing here?” he asked as he wiped his red-rimmed eyes. “I mean, I’m glad to see you, but I just didn’t expect it to be so soon.”

Jack reached instinctively for the pendant in Milton’s pocket. He patted it reverently, as if it held a baby’s first smile.

“We lost people had gotten even loster, like,” Jack explained in his cryptic way. “So Divining Rod was doing his divine thing to help us get back in the groove. And, when his crazy dowsing stick wobbled beyond Blimpo, we knew you must have either escaped or been kicked out.”

“So we hotfooted it back to Blimpo and found you two here,” Moondog interjected, “in between there and …” He casually leveled his long, yellowed finger at the cave beyond.

“There.”

A stale wind, like the belch of a thousand-year-old giant after downing a water tower full of rancid Clamato juice, rustled through Milton’s hair.

“Is that the entrance to … you know?” Milton asked.

Jack nodded.

“One of many,” he replied with a nervous edge to his voice.

Moondog frowned, an expression only readable through the downward slopes of snowy white beard.

“Annubis told us about your plan to rescue your sister from … there. While that’s a noble cause and all, I’m not sure if you know what you’re getting yourself into. That place makes Heck seem like an ice-cream social in Candyland.”

Milton stood up, straightened his glasses, and squinted at the cave. It was still, slumbering, yet thick with potential danger, as if it were filled with hibernating bears.

“I made a promise,” he said. “And I’ve lost everything—my sister, my pet … my life. So that promise is all that I have. The only thing that seems real to me after all this.”

Annubis sniffed the air. The fur on the back of his neck rose into stiff prickles.

“Whatever we do, we should do it now, and on the move. Even a creature as graceless and crude as Principal Bubb will find her way out of the Gorge and onto our trail, snapping at our heels with her dentures.”

Milton furrowed his brow.

“Those are dentures?”

“Yes … perhaps the first.”

“We should make tracks, like a jazz combo in the recording studio,” Jack said with a nod, his cowlick shaking like an upside-down question mark.

Milton, the two phantoms, and Annubis plodded across the Wastelands to its abrupt edge at the mouth of the tunnel. Hot, humid wind coiled and hissed out of the burrow’s mouth.

The passageway was shaped like a seemingly never-ending row of dismal, concrete croquet hoops. The floor was slick and sticky, like a second-run movie theater after a matinee—only instead of smelling like stale popcorn and dried soda, the place reeked of stale Limburger cheese and dried skunk puke. The ceaseless, hypnotizing burble of crowd noise lapped against the walls.

“What’s on the other side?” Milton quavered.

“Many things,” Annubis commented as he stepped across the threshold of volcanic rock and concrete. Harsh white lights embedded in the ceiling flickered on, casting streaks of horseshoe-shaped light on the rough-hewn walls. “None of which will allow a boy to pass through.”

Milton hurried behind him, ironically, like a small dog keeping up with its master’s long, steady stride.

“Then how—?”

“I’ve been thinking about that,” Moondog said as he wheeled his cart across the uneven stone floor. The travelers stopped.

“First,” Moondog continued as he rummaged through his shopping cart, “I saved a couple of these weird jars.”

He pulled out one of the Make-Believe Play-fellows jars. The soul was nothing more than a dull, swirling clot of beige fog. Milton glanced up from the jar to Moondog.

“That’s an imaginary friend?”

The wizened phantom shrugged.

“Not all imaginary friends are so … imaginative,” he surmised. “But you don’t want to be coming out of this tunnel with a rainbow unicorn mane and fairy wings.”

He handed the jar, the soul inside jiggling listlessly, to Milton.

“Just drink it down. Pretend it’s like a health shake.”

Milton grimaced as he slogged down the Make-Believe Play-fellow soul, gagging all the way.

“It even tastes beige,” Milton choked out. “Like drinking a trip to a furniture store with your parents.”

Moondog uncovered his Polaroid camera from the bottom of his shopping cart.

“Beige is good,” he said as he felt around for his scissors, blank forms, glue stick, and other essential elements key to forging a convincing assumed identity. “Beige won’t get you noticed. Although … we don’t want it to look like you’re trying not to be noticed. Hmmm … I know. Here.”

Moondog doffed his horned Viking helmet and placed it atop Milton’s head as if casually re-creating some ancient Nordic ceremony. Milton’s eyes, which were now shifting from their greenish blue to a dull, nondescript brown, looked up at the savage, towering headgear that loomed above his crown.

“Great. I’m sure I’ll just blend in like a booger under a kindergartner’s desk.”

“Actually,” Jack said, “the horns might help, considering where you’re going.”

“Plus they add a few feet to you,” Moondog offered. “Heightwise, I mean. Just to be on the safe side, though, I think I’ll write you down as a midget—”

“Little person,” Milton interjected as his features became less distinct.

“Little person,” Moondog continued. “Hopefully that will not only explain your youthful appearance, but also make customs a little uncomfortable so they’ll just hurry you on through. Little people have a way of doing that to nonlittle people.”

Jack slipped off his worn tweed jacket and gave it to Milton, who now was of average build, with an average nose and average mouth arranged averagely at the front of his average-shaped head.

Annubis whined uneasily.

“We can dress Milton up as the devil himself, and he still won’t be able to find his way. He needs a guide.”

Moondog smirked until his snowy white beard tilted upward like a mischievous ski slope.

“He needs a guide dog.”

Annubis cocked his head to the side.

“Guide dog? But I can’t just walk in and—”

“Sure you can,” Moondog interrupted as he pulled out a pair of dark sunglasses from the toolbox in his shopping cart. He took off Milton’s glasses and replaced them with the heavy black spectacles.

“I can’t see anything,” Milton commented.

“Join the club,” Moondog replied.

“So how does pretending I’m blind help me get to h-e-double-hockey-sticks?” Milton asked.

“It would help to explain the hat,” Jack offered.

“And it would also help to explain a guide dog,” Moondog continued, gesturing toward Annubis. “It would mean, of course, an entrance unbecoming a pseudo-god—on all fours—but a mission of dignity isn’t always dignified. Smile.”

Moondog snapped Milton’s picture. The yet-to-be-developed picture came spitting out of the camera. After waving the photo in the fetid air, Moondog gave it a few artful slices with his scissors, pasted it to a document, stamped it with a rubber stamp, and handed it to Milton.

“Martin Foulest?” Milton said, squinting over the frames of his dark sunglasses.

“Cool, huh?” Moondog replied. “It’s an anagram of your name … Milton Fauster …”

“He, like, knows what his name is,” Jack chided.

“Exactly,” Moondog countered. “It sounds enough like your name so that you’ll answer to it. This is a major sticking point in acts of espionage. Not responding to your cover.”

Moondog pulled a red kerchief from his cart and tied it around Annubis’s slender neck.

“Your name is Dakota,” Moondog said as he cinched the knot. “That’s a good name for a dog.”

Annubis sniffed the air.

“We’re closer than I thought,” he said as he hunkered down on all fours beside Milton.

Milton slid the sunglasses down the bridge of his unremarkable nose.

“Down there,” Milton said. “It looks like the floor is moving.”

“Moving sidewalk,” Moondog said matter-of-factly. “What else would you expect just before entering an Errport?”