The Dark Tower V: Wolves of the Calla
Preceded by | The Wind Through the Keyhole |
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Followed by | Song of Susannah |
The Dark Tower V: Wolves of the Calla is a
Plot summary
After escaping the alternate
Soon after, the ka-tet discover that they are being followed by citizens of the farming village of Calla Bryn Sturgis, as well as Father Callahan. He and the townsfolk request the ka-tet's assistance in battling against the Wolves of Thunderclap, who come once a generation to take one child from each pair of the town's twins. (For some reason all children in the town are born as twins.) After a few months of being away, the children are then returned "roont" (ruined) - mentally handicapped and destined to grow to enormous size and die young. The Wolves are due to come in about a month's time, according to Andy, an amicable humanoid robot that appeared in the Calla long ago. When asked about the Wolves, Andy refuses to divulge any information without a password. Jamie Jaffords, an elderly resident of the Calla, remembers the previous time the Wolves appeared.
Father Callahan also tells the gunslingers the story of how he left Maine following his battle with the vampire
Eddie and Roland venture to Doorway Cave. Using Black Thirteen, Roland opens a door for Eddie to travel to New York. Once there he fends off Balazar's thugs, threatening to kill them if they come back for Tower. He then tells Tower that Balazar will come back for him, and that he should flee and leave a message for the ka-tet so that they may find him again. Tower agrees to do so but, in exchange, he asks that he can hide his valuable books in Roland's world for safekeeping, where they are hidden in Doorway Cave.
While planning the battle with the Wolves, Roland and Jake notice bizarre changes in Susannah's behavior, which are linked to the time when she coupled with the demon in the stone circle. Susannah turns out to have been hiding the fact that she was impregnated by the demon. Susannah later reveals to the ka-tet that she herself has come to grips with it, and knowledge of a second personality living in her named Mia "daughter of none" is shared.
Andy turns out to be an emissary for the Wolves. The father of Jake's new friend Benny Slightman has betrayed the Calla by feeding Andy information in exchange for sparing Benny from going to Thunderclap. Jake follows the two conspirators to "The Dogan", a military outpost between the Calla and Thunderclap.[N 5] There, he discovers a surveillance system that monitors the entire Calla, and overhears Andy and Slightman communicating with someone named Finli o'Tego. Jake tells Roland, who shows mercy by not killing Slightman, instead leaving him alive for his son and Jake's sake. Eddie also blinds Andy and decommissions him for his part in the Wolves' attack.
On the day of the Wolves' arrival, Roland reveals what he has gleaned from their investigation to his attack team: the Wolves are not men, but robots, much like Andy himself. The Wolves attack, using weapons resembling snitches and lightsabers, and have Doctor Doom-like visages. The gunslingers, aided by plate-throwing women in the Calla, defeat the wolves with only a few casualties (including Benny Slightman, to Jake's dismay), while the children are safely hidden in a rice patch nearby.
After the battle, Mia takes over the body of Susannah and flees to Doorway Cave, where she uses Black Thirteen to transport herself to New York. Roland, Jake, Eddie, and Callahan follow her there but are too late; Mia and Black Thirteen are gone, and the door in the cave is closed. While looking through Tower's books in the cave, Callahan makes a discovery that causes him to question his own existence: a fictional novel called 'Salem's Lot, written by someone named Stephen King, that seems to recount his encounters with Barlow and the vampires.
Influences
Stephen King has acknowledged multiple sources of influence for this story, including Akira Kurosawa's Seven Samurai, its remake The Magnificent Seven, Sergio Leone's "Man with No Name" trilogy, and other works by Howard Hawks and John Sturges, among others.
Many direct references to popular culture are noted either by characters or via narration within the book's text. Such instances include: several of the Wolves carrying weapons that resemble
King also references an earlier, uncollected short story from the late 1980s called "The Reploids", which deals with people sliding between realities and also features denominations of money featuring President Chadbourne.
Notes
- ^ as depicted in The Waste Lands.
- ^ who previously appeared in The Drawing of the Three.
- ^ the plot of the novel 'Salem's Lot.
- ^ as depicted in The Gunslinger.
- ^ which is also featured in The Dark Tower: The Long Road Home.
References
- ^ "2004 Award Winners & Nominees". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 2009-07-22.
- ^ "The 50 Greatest Comic Book Characters". Empire. 2008. Retrieved 2009-04-05.