"The Ferris wheel?" said Homer Wells.
"If you don't mind showin' me," said Mr. Rose. "There just can't be no talk about it."
"Right," Homer said. "We better go soon, before it gets any colder and they close it for the season. I'll bet it's pretty cold, riding it now."
"I don't know if I want to ride it until I see it," said Mr. Rose.
"Sure," said Homer.
Mrs. Worthington let him take the van, but when he picked up Mr. Rose at the cider house, everyone was curious.
"We've got to check somethin' in the far orchard," Mr. Rose told the men.
"What far orchard he talkin' about?" Black Pan asked Hero when Homer and Mr. Rose got in the van.
Homer Wells remembered his ride on the Ferris wheel with Wally. It was much colder now, and Mr. Rose was subdued all the way to Cape Kenneth and uncharacteristically drawn into himself as they walked through the carnival together. The summer crowd was gone; some of the carnival events were already closed up tight.
"Don't be nervous," Homer said to Mr. Rose. "The Ferris wheel is perfectly safe."
"I'm not nervous about no wheel," said Mr. Rose. "You see a lot of people my color around here?"
Homer had detected nothing hostile in the looks from the people; as an orphan, he always suspected that people singled him out to stare at--and so he had not felt especially singled out in the company of Mr. Rose. But now he noticed more of the looks and realized that the looks an orphan might detect were only imagined, by comparison.
When they got to the Ferris wheel, there was no line, but they had to wait for the ride in progress to be over. When the wheel stopped, Homer and Mr. Rose got on and sat together in one chair.
"We could each sit in our own chairs, if you prefer," said Homer Wells.
"Keep it like it is," said Mr. Rose. When the wheel began its ascent, he sat very still and straight and held his breath until they were nearly at the top of the rise.
"Over there's the orchard," pointed Homer Wells, but Mr. Rose stared straight ahead, as if the stability of the entire Ferris wheel relied on each rider's maintaining perfect balance.
"What's so special about doin' this?" asked Mr. Rose rigidly.
"It's just for the ride, and the view, I guess," said Homer Wells.
"I like the view from the roof," Mr. Rose said. When they started the descent of the wheel turn, Mr. Rose said, "It's a good thing I didn't eat much today."
By the time they passed ground level and began their ascent again, a substantial crowd had formed--but they didn't appear to be standing in line for the next ride. There were only two couples and one boy by himself sharing the wheel with Homer and Mr. Rose, and when they were at the top of the wheel turn again, Homer realized that the crowd below them had formed to stare at Mr. Rose.
"They come to see if niggers fly," Mr. Rose said, "but I ain't goin' nowhere--not for no one's entertainment. They come to see if the machine is gonna break down, tryin' to carry a nigger--or maybe they wanna see me throw up."
"Just don't do anything," Homer Wells said.
"That's the advice I been hearin' all my life, boy," Mr. Rose said. As they started their descent, Mr. Rose leaned out of the
chair--quite dangerously farther than was necessary--and vomited in a splendid arc over the crowd below them. The crowd moved as one, but not everyone moved in time.
When their chair was at the bottom of the descent again, the Ferris wheel was stopped so that the sick man could get off. The crowd had retreated, except for a young man who was especially splattered. As Homer Wells and Mr. Rose were leaving the Ferris wheel grounds, the young man came forward and said to Mr. Rose, "You looked like you meant to do that."
"Who means to get sick?" said Mr. Rose; he kept walking, and Homer kept up with him. The young man was about Homer's age; he should have homework, thought Homer Wells--if he's still in school, it's a school night.
"I think you meant to," the young man said to Mr. Rose, who stopped walking away then.
"What business you in?" Mr. Rose asked the boy.
"What?" the young man asked, but Homer Wells stepped between them.
"My friend is sick," Homer Wells said. "Please just leave him alone."