The Langoliers fpm-1

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The Langoliers fpm-1 Page 12

by Stephen King


  “Toomy!” Brian shouted. “Craig Toomy! Where are you?”

  There was no response. Only that queer, oppressive silence. And Laurel noticed something then, something that made her skin cold. Brian had cupped his hands and shouted up the escalator. In a high-ceilinged place like this one, there should have been at least some echo.

  But there had been none. No echo at all.

  10

  While the others were occupied downstairs — the two teenagers and the old geezer standing by one of the car-rental desks, the others watching the British thug as he tried the phones — Craig Toomy had crept up the stalled escalator as quietly as a mouse. He knew exactly where he wanted to go; he knew exactly what to look for when he got there.

  He strode briskly across the large waiting room with his briefcase swinging beside his right knee, ignoring both the empty chairs and an empty bar called The Red Baron. At the far end of the room was a sign hanging over the mouth of a wide, dark corridor. It read

  GATE 5 INTERNATIONAL ARRIVALS

  DUTY FREE SHOPS

  U.S. CUSTOMS

  AIRPORT SECURITY

  He had almost reached the head of this corridor when he glanced out one of the wide windows at the tarmac again... and his pace faltered. He approached the glass slowly and looked out.

  There was nothing to see but the empty concrete and the moveless white sky, but his eyes began to widen nonetheless and he felt fear begin to steal into his heart.

  They’re coming, a dead voice suddenly told him. It was the voice of his father, and it spoke from a small, haunted mausoleum tucked away in a gloomy corner of Craig Toomy’s heart.

  “No,” he whispered, and the word spun a little blossom of fog on the window in front of his lips. “No one is coming.”

  You’ve been bad. Worse, you’ve been lazy.

  “No!”

  Yes. You had an appointment and you skipped it. You ran away. You ran away to Bangor, Maine, of all the silly places.

  “It wasn’t my fault,” he muttered. He was gripping the handle of the briefcase with almost painful tightness now. “I was taken against my will. I... I was shanghaied!”

  No reply from that interior voice. Only waves of disapproval. And once again Craig intuited the pressure he was under, the terrible never-ending pressure, the weight of the fathoms. The interior voice did not have to tell him there were no excuses; Craig knew that. He knew it of old.

  THEY were here... and they will be back. You know that, don’t you?

  He knew. The langoliers would be back. They would be back for him. He could sense them. He had never seen them, but he knew how horrible they would be. And was he alone in his knowledge? He thought not.

  He thought perhaps the little blind girl knew something about the langoliers as well.

  But that didn’t matter. The only thing which did was getting to Boston, getting to Boston before the langoliers could arrive in Bangor from their terrible, doomish lair to eat him alive and screaming. He had to get to that meeting at the Pru, had to let them know what he had done, and then he would be...

  Free.

  He would be free.

  Craig pulled himself away from the window, away from the emptiness and the stillness, and plunged into the corridor beneath the sign. He passed the empty shops without a glance. Beyond them he came to the door he was looking for. There was a small rectangular plaque mounted on it, just above a bullseye peephole. AIRPORT SECURITY, it said.

  He had to get in there. One way or another, he had to get in there.

  All of this... this craziness... it doesn’t have to belong to me. I don’t have to own it. Not anymore.

  Craig reached out and touched the doorknob of the Airport Security office. The blank look in his eyes had been replaced by an expression of clear determination.

  I have been under stress for a long, a very long, time. Since I was seven? No — I think it started even before that. The fact is, I’ve been under stress for as long as I can remember. This latest piece of craziness is just a new variation. It’s probably just what the man in the ratty sport-coat said it was: a test. Agents of some secret government agency or sinister foreign power running a test. But I choose not to participate in any more tests. I don’t care if it’s my father in charge, or my mother, or the dean of the Graduate School of Management, or the Desert Sun Banking Corporation’s Board of Directors. I choose not to participate. I choose to escape. I choose to get to Boston and finish what I set out to do when I presented the Argentinian bond-buy in the first place. If I don’t...

  But he knew what would happen if he didn’t.

  He would go mad.

  Craig tried the doorknob. It did not move beneath his hand, but when he gave it a small, frustrated push, the door swung open. Either it had been left slightly unlatched, or it had unlocked when the power went off and the security systems went dead. Craig didn’t care which. The important thing was that he wouldn’t need to muss his clothes trying to crawl through an air-conditioning duct or something. He still had every intention of showing up at his meeting before the end of the day, and he didn’t want his clothes smeared with dirt and grease when he got there. One of the simple, unexceptional truths of life was this: guys with dirt on their suits have no credibility.

  He pushed the door open and went inside.

  11

  Brian and Nick reached the top of the escalator first, and the others gathered around them. This was BIA’s central waiting room, a large square box filled with contour plastic seats (some with coin-op TVs bolted to the arms) and dominated by a wall of polarized floor-to-ceiling windows. To their immediate left was the airport newsstand and the security checkpoint which served Gate I; to their right and all the way across the room was The Red Baron Bar and The Cloud Nine Restaurant. Beyond the restaurant was the corridor leading to the Airport Security Office and the International Arrivals Annex.

  “Come on—” Nick began, and Dinah said, “Wait.”

  She spoke in a strong, urgent voice and they all turned toward her curiously.

  Dinah dropped Laurel’s hand and raised both of her own. She cupped the thumbs behind her ears and splayed her fingers out like fans. Then she simply stood there, still as a post, in this odd and rather weird listening posture.

  “What—” Brian began, and Dinah said “Shhh!” in an abrupt, inarguable sibilant.

  She turned slightly to the left, paused, then turned in the other direction until the white light coming through the windows fell directly on her, turning her already pale face into something which was ghostlike and eerie. She took off her dark glasses. The eyes beneath were wide, brown, and not quite blank.

  “There,” she said in a low, dreaming voice, and Laurel felt terror begin to stroke at her heart with chilly fingers. Nor was she alone. Bethany was crowding close to her on one side, and Don Gaffney moved in against her other side. “There — I can feel the light. They said that’s how they know I can see again. I can always feel the light. It’s like heat inside my head.”

  “Dinah, what—” Brian began.

  Nick elbowed him. The Englishman’s face was long and drawn, his forehead ribbed with lines. “Be quiet, mate.”

  “The fight is... here.”

  She walked slowly away from them, her hands still fanned out by her ears, her elbows held out before her to encounter any object which might stand in her way. She advanced until she was less than two feet from the window. Then she slowly reached out until her fingers touched the glass. They looked like black starfish outlined against the white sky. She let out a small, unhappy murmur.

  “The glass is wrong, too,” she said in that dreaming voice.

  “Dinah—” Laurel began.

  “Shhh...” she whispered without turning round. She stood at the window like a little girl waiting for her father to come home from work. “I hear something.”

  These whispered words sent a wordless, thoughtless horror through Albert Kaussner’s mind. He felt pressure on his shoulders and looked do
wn to see he had crossed his arms across his chest and was clutching himself hard.

  Brian listened with all his concentration. He heard his own breathing, and the breathing of the others... but he heard nothing else. It’s her imagination, he thought. That’s all it is.

  But he wondered.

  “What?” Laurel asked urgently. “What do you hear, Dinah?”

  “I don’t know,” she said without turning from the window. “It’s very faint. I thought I heard it when we got off the airplane, and then I decided it was just my imagination. Now I can hear it better. I can hear it even through the glass. It sounds... a little like Rice Krispies after you pour in the milk.”

  Brian turned to Nick and spoke in a low voice. “Do you hear anything?”

  “Not a bloody thing,” Nick said, matching Brian’s tone. “But she’s blind. She’s used to making her ears do double duty.”

  “I think it’s hysteria,” Brian said. He was whispering now, his lips almost touching Nick’s ear.

  Dinah turned from the window.

  “Do you hear anything?” she mimicked. “Not a bloody thing. But she’s blind. She’s used to making her ears do double duty.” She paused, then added: “I think it’s hysteria.”

  “Dinah, what are you talking about?” Laurel asked, perplexed and frightened. She had not heard Brian and Nick’s muttered conversation, although she had been standing much closer to them than Dinah was.

  “Ask them,” Dinah said. Her voice was trembling. “I’m not crazy! I’m blind, but I’m not crazy!”

  “All right,” Brian said, shaken. “All right, Dinah.” And to Laurel he said: “I was talking to Nick. She heard us. From over there by the windows, she heard us.”

  “You’ve got great ears, hon,” Bethany said.

  “I hear what I hear,” Dinah said. “And I hear something out there. In that direction.” She pointed due east through the glass. Her unseeing eyes swept them. “And it’s bad. It’s an awful sound, a scary sound.”

  Don Gaffney said hesitantly: “If you knew what it was, little miss, that would help, maybe.”

  “I don’t,” Dinah said. “But I know that it’s closer than it was.” She put her dark glasses back on with a hand that was trembling. “We have to get out of here. And we have to get out soon. Because something is coming. The bad something making the cereal noise.”

  “Dinah,” Brian said, “the plane we came in is almost out of fuel.”

  “Then you have to put some more in it!” Dinah screamed shrilly at him. “It’s coming, don’t you understand? It’s coming, and if we haven’t gone when it gets here, we’re going to die! We’re all going to die!”

  Her voice cracked and she began to sob. She was not a sibyl or a medium but only a little girl forced to live her terror in a darkness which was almost complete. She staggered toward them, her self-possession utterly gone. Laurel grabbed her before she could stumble over one of the guide-ropes which marked the way to the security checkpoint and hugged her tight. She tried to soothe the girl, but those last words echoed and rang in Laurel’s confused, shocked mind: If we haven’t gone when it gets here, we’re going to die.

  We’re all going to die.

  12

  Craig Toomy heard the brat begin to caterwaul back there someplace and ignored it. He had found what he was looking for in the third locker he opened, the one with the name MARKEY Dymotaped to the front. Mr Markey’s lunch — a sub sandwich poking out of a brown paper bag — was on the top shelf. Mr Markey’s street shoes were placed neatly side by side on the bottom shelf. Hanging in between, from the same hook, were a plain white shirt and a gunbelt. Protruding from the holster was the butt of Mr Markey’s service revolver.

  Craig unsnapped the safety strap and took the gun out. He didn’t know much about guns — this could have been a .32, a .38, or even a .45, for all of him — but he was not stupid, and after a few moments of fumbling he was able to roll the cylinder. All six chambers were loaded. He pushed the cylinder back in, nodding slightly when he heard it click home, and then inspected the hammer area and both sides of the grip. He was looking for a safety catch, but there didn’t appear to be one. He put his finger on the trigger and tightened until he saw both the hammer and the cylinder move slightly. Craig nodded, satisfied.

  He turned around and without warning the most intense loneliness of his adult life struck him. The gun seemed to take on weight and the hand holding it sagged. Now he stood with his shoulders slumped, the briefcase dangling from his right hand, the security guard’s pistol dangling from his left. On his face was an expression of utter, abject misery. And suddenly a memory recurred to him, something he hadn’t thought of in years: Craig Toomy, twelve years old, lying in bed and shivering as hot tears ran down his face. In the other room the stereo was turned up loud and his mother was singing along with Merrilee Rush in her droning off-key drunk’s voice: “Just call me angel... of the morn-ing, bay-bee... just touch my cheek... before you leave me, bay-bee...”

  Lying there in bed. Shaking. Crying. Not making a sound. And thinking: Why can’t you love me and leave me alone, Momma? Why can’t you just love me and leave me alone?

  “I don’t want to hurt anyone,” Craig Toomy muttered through his tears. “I don’t want to, but this... this is intolerable.”

  Across the room was a bank of TV monitors, all blank. For a moment, as he looked at them, the truth of what had happened, what was still happening, tried to crowd in on him. For a moment it almost broke through his complex system of neurotic shields and into the air-raid shelter where he lived his life.

  Everyone is gone, Craiggy-weggy. The whole world is gone except for you and the people who were on that plane.

  “No,” he moaned, and collapsed into one of the chairs standing around the Formica-topped kitchen table in the center of the room. “No, that’s not so. That’s just not so. I refute that idea. I refute it utterly.”

  The langoliers were here, and they will be back, his father said. It overrode the voice of his mother, as it always had. You better be gone when they get here... or you know what will happen.

  He knew, all right. They would eat him. The langoliers would eat him up.

  “But I don’t want to hurt anyone,” he repeated in a dreary, distraught voice. There was a mimeographed duty roster lying on the table. Craig let go of his briefcase and laid the gun on the table beside him. Then he picked up the duty roster, looked at it for a moment with unseeing eyes, and began to tear a long strip from the lefthand side.

  Rii-ip.

  Soon he was hypnotized as a pile of thin strips — maybe the thinnest ever! — began to flutter down onto the table. But even then the cold voice of his father would not entirely leave him:

  Or you know what will happen.

  Chapter 5

  A Book of Matches. The Adventure of the Salami Sandwich. Another Example of the Deductive Method. The Arizona Yew Plays the Violin. The Only Sound in Town.

  1

  The frozen silence following Dinah’s warning was finally broken by Robert Jenkins. “We have some problems,” he said in a dry lecture-hall voice. “If Dinah hears something — and following the remarkable demonstration she’s just given us, I’m inclined to think she does — it would be helpful if we knew what it is. We don’t. That’s one problem. The plane’s lack of fuel is another problem.”

  “There’s a 727 Out there,” Nick said, “all cozied up to a jetway. Can you fly one of those, Brian?”

  “Yes,” Brian said.

  Nick spread his hands in Bob’s direction and shrugged, as if to say There you are: one knot untied already.

  “Assuming we do take off again, where should we go?” Bob Jenkins went on. “A third problem.”

  “Away,” Dinah said immediately. “Away from that sound. We have to get away from that sound, and what’s making it.”

  “How long do you think we have?” Bob asked her gently. “How long before it gets here, Dinah? Do you have any idea at all?”

&nbs
p; “No,” she said from the safe circle of Laurel’s arms. “I think it’s still far. I think there’s still time. But...”

  “Then I suggest we do exactly as Mr Warwick has suggested,” Bob said. “Let’s step over to the restaurant, have a bite to eat, and discuss what happens next. Food does have a beneficial effect on what Monsieur Poirot liked to call the little gray cells.”

  “We shouldn’t wait,” Dinah said fretfully.

  “Fifteen minutes,” Bob said. “No more than that. And even at your age, Dinah, you should know that useful thinking must always precede useful action.”

  Albert suddenly realized that the mystery writer had his own reasons for wanting to go to the restaurant. Mr Jenkins’s little gray cells were all in apple-pie working order — or at least he believed they were — and following his eerily sharp assessment of their situation on board the plane, Albert was willing at least to give him the benefit of the doubt. He wants to show us something, or prove something to us, he thought.

  “Surely we have fifteen minutes?” he coaxed.

  “Well...” Dinah said unwillingly. “I guess so.”

  “Fine,” Bob said briskly. “It’s decided.” And he struck off across the room toward the restaurant, as if taking it for granted that the others would follow him.

  Brian and Nick looked at each other.

  “We better go along,” Albert said quietly. “I think he knows stuff.”

  “What kind of stuff?” Brian asked.

  “I don’t know, exactly, but I think it might be stuff worth finding out.”

  Albert followed Bob; Bethany followed Albert; the others fell in behind them, Laurel leading Dinah by the hand. The little girl was very pale.

 

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