Stephen King

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Stephen King Page 65

by The Tommyknockers (v5)


  Safe.

  Safe, yeah. That was it. Safe. And whatever was going on south of Troy on this dozy summer afternoon, it wasn’t at all safe.

  I would like to go home, please.

  Right. There had probably been times when Woodward and Bernstein felt that way when Nixon’s boys were really putting the squeeze on. Bernard Fall had probably felt that way when he got off the plane in Saigon for the last time. When you saw the TV news correspondents in trouble spots like Lebanon and Tehran, they only looked cool, calm, and collected. Viewers never had a chance to inspect their shorts.

  The story is out there, and I’m going to get it, and when I collect my Pulitzer Prize, I can say I owe it all to David Bright ... and my secret Superman wristwatch.

  He put the Dodge in gear again and drove on toward Haven.

  6

  He hadn’t gone a mile before he began to feel ill. He thought this must be a physical symptom of his fear and ignored it. Then, when he began to feel worse, he asked himself (as one is apt to do when he realizes that the nausea sitting in his stomach like a small dark cloud is not going away) what he had eaten. There was no blame to be laid in that direction. He hadn’t been afraid when he got up that morning, but he had been feeling a lot of anticipation and high-spirited tension; as a result he had refused the usual bacon and scrambled eggs and settled for tea and dry toast. That was all.

  I would like to go home! The voice was now more shrill.

  Leandro pushed on, teeth clamped grimly together. The scoop was in Haven. If he couldn’t get into Haven, there would be no scoop. You couldn’t hit ‘em if you couldn’t see ’em. QED.

  Less than a mile from the town line—the day was eerily, utterly dead—a series of beeping, booping, and buzzing noises began to come from the back seat, startling him so badly that he cried out and pulled over to the side of the road again.

  He looked in back and at first was unable to credit what he was seeing. It had to be, he thought, a hallucination brought on by his increasing nausea.

  When he and his mother had been in Halifax this past weekend, he had taken his nephew Tony out for a Dairy Queen. Tony (whom Leandro privately thought was an ill-mannered little snot) had sat in the back playing with a plastic toy that looked a bit like the handset of a Princess phone. This toy was called Merlin, and it ran on a computer chip. It played four or five simple games which called for simple feats of memory or the ability to identify a simple mathematical series. Leandro remembered it had also played tic-tac-toe.

  Anyway, Tony must have forgotten it, and now it was going crazy in the back seat, its red lights flashing on and off in random patterns (but were they? or just a little too fast for him to catch?), making its simple series of sounds again and again and again. It was running by itself.

  No ... no. I hit a pothole or something. That’s all. Jogged its switch. Got it going.

  But he could see the small black switch on the side. It was pushed to Off. But Merlin went on booping and beeping and buzzing. It reminded him of a Vegas slot-machine paying off a big jackpot.

  The thing’s plastic case began to smoke. The plastic itself was sinking ... drooling ... running like tallow. The lights flashed faster ... faster. Suddenly they all went on at once, bright red, and the gadget emitted a strangled buzzing sound. The case cracked open. There was a brittle shower of plastic shards. The seat-cover started to smolder underneath it.

  Ignoring his stomach, Leandro got up on his knees and knocked it onto the floor. There was a charred spot on the seat where Merlin had lain.

  What is this?

  The answer, irrelevant, nearly a scream:

  I WOULD LIKE TO GO HOME NOW PLEASE!

  “The ability to isolate a simple mathematical series.” Did I think that? The John Leandro that flunked general math in high school? Do you mean it?

  Never mind that, just bug OUT!

  No.

  He put the Dodge in gear and drove on again. He had gone less than twenty yards when he thought suddenly, with crazy exhilaration:

  The ability to isolate a simple mathematical series indicates the existence of a general case, doesn’t it? You could express it this way, come to think of it: ax[2] + bxy = cy[2] + dx + ey + f- 0.

  Yup. It’ll work as long as a, b, c, d, and f are constants. I think. Yeah. You bet. But you couldn’t let a, b, or c be 0—that’d fuck it for sure! Let f take care of itself! Ha!

  Leandro felt like puking, but he still uttered a shrill, triumphant laugh. All at once he felt as if his brain had lifted off, right through the top of his skull. Although he didn’t know it (having pretty much dozed through that part of Nerd Math), he had reinvented the general quadratic equation in two variables, which can indeed be used to isolate components in a simple mathematical series. It blew his mind.

  A moment later, blood burst from his nose in an amazing flood.

  That was the end of John Leandro’s first effort to get into Haven. He threw the gearshift into reverse and backed unsteadily up the road, weaving from side to side, right arm hooked over the front seat, blood pouring onto the shoulder of his shirt as he stared out through the back window with watering eyes.

  He backed up for almost a mile, then turned around in a driveway. He looked down at himself. His shirt was drenched with blood. But he felt better. A little better, he amended. Still, he didn’t linger; he drove back to Troy Village and parked in front of the general store.

  He walked in, expecting the usual gathering of old men to stare at his bloody shirt with silent Yankee surprise. But only the shopkeeper was there, and he didn’t look surprised at all—not at the blood, not at Leandro’s question about any shirts he might have in stock.

  “Look like your nose might’ve bled a tetch,” the storekeeper said mildly, and showed Leandro a selection of T-shirts. An inordinately large selection for such a small store as this, Leandro thought—he was slowly getting hold of himself, although his head still ached and his stomach still felt sour and unsteady. The flow of blood from his nose had scared him very badly.

  “You could say that,” Leandro said. He allowed the old man to thumb through the shirts for him, because there was tacky blood still drying on his own hands. They were sized S, M, L, and XL. WHERE TH’ HELL IS TROY, MAINE? some said. On others there was a lobster and the slogan I GOT THE BEST PIECE OF TAIL I EVER HAD IN TROY, MAINE. On others there was a large blackfly which looked like a monster from outer space. THE MAINE STATE BIRD, these proclaimed.

  “You sure do have lots of shirts,” Leandro said, pointing to a WHERE TH’ HELL in an M size. He thought the lobster shirt was amusing, but thought his mother would be less than wild about the innuendo.

  “Ayuh,” the storekeeper said. “Have to have a lot. Sell a lot.”

  “Tourists?” Leandro’s mind was already racing ahead, trying to figure out what came next. He had thought he was onto something big; now he believed it was one hell of a lot bigger than even he had believed.

  “Some,” the storekeeper said, “but there ain’t been many down this way this summer. Mostly I sell em to folks like you.”

  “Like me?”

  “Ayuh. Folks with bloody noses.”

  Leandro gaped at the storekeeper.

  “Their noses bleed, they wreck their shirts,” the storekeeper said. “Same way you wrecked yours. They want a new one, and if they’re just locals—like I ’spect you are—they ain’t got no luggitch and no changes. So they stop first place they come to and buy a new one. I don’t blame em. Drivin’ around in a shirt all over blood like yours’d make me puke. Why, I’ve had ladies in here this summer—nice-looking ladies, too, dressed to the nines—who smelled like guts in a hogshead.”

  The storekeeper cackled, showing a mouth that was perfectly toothless.

  Leandro said slowly: “Let me get this straight. Other people come back from Haven with bloody noses? It’s not just me?”

  “Just you? Hell, no! Shittagoddam! The day they buried Ruth McCausland, I sold fifteen shirts! That one
day! I was thinkin about retirin on the proceeds and movin to Florida.”

  The storekeeper cackled again.

  “They was all out-of-towners.” He said this as if it explained everything—and perhaps in his mind, it did. “Couple of em was still spoutin when they come in here. Noses like fountains! Ears too, sometimes. Shittagoddam!”

  “And nobody knows about this?”

  The old man looked at Leandro from wise eyes.

  “You do, sonny,” he said.

  6.

  INSIDE THE SHIP

  1

  “You ready, Gard?”

  Gardener was sitting on the front porch, looking out at Route 9. The voice came from behind him, and it was easy—too easy—for him not to flash on a hundred sleazy prison movies, where the warden arrives to escort the condemned man along the Last Mile. Such scenes always beginning, of course, with the warden growling, Are you ready, Rocky?

  Ready for this? You got to be kidding.

  He got up, turned around, saw the equipment in Bobbi’s arms, then the little smile on Bobbi’s face. There was something knowing in that smile that he didn’t like.

  “See something funny?” he asked.

  “Heard it. Heard you, Gard. You were thinking about old prison movies,” Bobbi said. “And then you thought, ‘Ready for this? You got to be kidding.’ I caught all of that one, and that’s very rare ... unless you’re deliberately sending. That’s why I was smiling.”

  “You were peeking.”

  “Yes. And it’s getting easier to do,” Bobbi said, still smiling.

  From behind his decaying mental shield, Gardener thought: I have a gun now, Bobbi. It’s under my bed. I got it in the First Reformed Church of the Tommyknockers. It was dangerous ... but it would be more dangerous not to know just how deep Bobbi’s ability to “peek” now went.

  Bobbi’s smile faltered a little. “What was that one?” she asked.

  “You tell me,” he said, and when her smile began to change to a look of narrow suspicion he added easily, “Come on, Bobbi, I was just pulling your string a little. I was only wondering what you got there.”

  Bobbi brought the equipment over. There were two rubber snorkel mouthpieces attached to tanks and homemade regulators.

  “We wear these,” she said. “When we go inside.” Inside.

  Just the word lit a hot spark in his belly and triggered all sorts of conflicting emotions—awe, terror, anticipation, curiosity, tension. Part of him felt like a superstitious native preparing to walk on taboo ground; the rest felt like a kid on Christmas morning.

  “The air inside is different, then,” Gardener said.

  “Not so different.” Bobbi had put her makeup on indifferently this morning, perhaps having decided there was no longer any need to hide the accelerating physical changes from Gardener. Gard realized he could see Bobbi’s tongue moving inside her head as she spoke ... only it didn’t look precisely like a tongue anymore. And the pupils of Bobbi’s eyes looked bigger, but somehow uneven and wavering, as if they were peering up at him from underwater. Water with a slight greenish tinge. He felt his stomach turn over.

  “Not so different,” she said. “Just ... rotten.”

  “Rotten?”

  “The ship’s been sealed for over twenty-five thousand centuries,” Bobbi said patiently. “Totally sealed. We’d be killed by the outrush of bad air as soon as we opened the hatch. So we wear these.”

  “What’s in them?”

  “Nothing but good old Haven air. The tanks are small—forty, maybe fifty minutes of air. You clip it to your belt like this, see?”

  “Yes.”

  Bobbi offered him one of the rigs. Gard attached the tank to his belt. He had to raise his T-shirt to do it, and he was very glad he’d decided to leave the .45 under the bed for now.

  “Start using the canned air just before I open it up,” Bobbi said. “Almost forgot. Here. Just in case you forget.” She handed Gardener a pair of noseplugs. Gard stuffed them into a jeans pocket.

  “Well!” Bobbi said briskly. “Are you ready, then?”

  “We’re really going in there?”

  “We really are,” Bobbi said almost tenderly.

  Gardener laughed shakily. His hands and feet were cold. “I’m pretty fucking excited,” he said.

  Bobbi smiled. “I am too.”

  “Also, I’m scared.”

  In that same tender voice Bobbi said, “No need to be, Gard. Everything will be all right.”

  Something in that tone made Gardener feel more scared than ever.

  2

  They took the Tomcat and cruised silently through the dead woods, the only sound the minute hum of batteries. Neither of them talked.

  Bobbi parked the Tomcat by the lean-to and they stood for a moment looking at the silver dish rising out of the trench. The morning sun shone on it in a pure, widening wedge of light.

  Inside, Gardener thought again.

  “Are you ready?” Bobbi asked again. Come on, Rocky—just one big jolt, you’ll never feel a thing.

  “Yeah, fine,” Gardener said. His voice was a trifle hoarse.

  Bobbi was looking at him inscrutably with her changing eyes—those floating, widening pupils. Gardener seemed to feel mental fingers fluttering over his thoughts, trying to pull them open.

  “Going in there could kill you, you know,” Bobbi said at last. “Not the air—we’ve got that licked.” She smiled. “It’s funny, you know. Five minutes on one of those mouthpieces would knock someone from the outside unconscious, and half an hour of it would kill him. But it’ll keep us alive. Does that tickle you, Gard?”

  “Yes,” Gard said, looking at the ship and wondering the things he always wondered: Where did you come from? And how long did you have to cruise the night to get here? “It tickles me.”

  “I think you’ll be okay, but you know—” Bobbi shrugged. “Your head ... that steel plate interacts somehow with the—”

  “I know the risk.”

  “As long as you do.”

  Bobbi turned and walked toward the trench. Gardener stood where he was for a moment, watching her go.

  I know the risk from the plate. What I’m less clear on is the risk from you, Bobbi. Is it Haven air I’m going to get when I have to use that mask, or something like Raid?

  But it didn’t matter, did it? He had thrown the dice. And nothing was going to keep him from seeing inside that ship, if he could—not David Brown, not the whole world.

  Bobbi reached the trench. She turned and looked back, her made-up face a dull mask in the morning light angling through the old pines and spruces which surrounded this place. “Coming?”

  “Yeah,” Gardener said, and walked over to the ship.

  3

  Getting down proved to be unexpectedly tricky. Ironically, getting up was the easy part. The button at the bottom was right there, in fact no more than the 0 on a remote telephone handset. At the top, the button was a conventional electrical switch set on one of the posts which supported the lean-to. This was fifty feet from the edge of the trench. For the first time Gardener realized how all those car recalls could happen; until now, neither of them had bothered with the fact that their arms were somewhat less than fifty feet long.

  They had been using the sling to go up and down for a long time now, long enough to take it for granted. Standing at the edge of the trench, they realized that they had never both gone down together. What both also realized but neither said was that they could have gone down one at a time; with someone to run the buttons at the bottom, all would have been well. Neither said it because it was understood between them that this time, and only this time, they must go down together, perfectly together, both with one foot in the single stirrup, arms around each other’s waists, like lovers in a descending swing. It was stupid; just stupid, just stupid enough to be the only right way.

  They looked at each other without saying a word—but two thoughts flew, and crossed in the air.

  (here we are a couple
of college graduates)

  (Bobbi where’d I leave my left-handed monkey wrench)

  Bobbi’s strange new mouth quivered. She turned around and snorted. Gard felt a moment of the old warmth touch his heart then. It was the last time he really ever saw the Old and Unimproved Bobbi Anderson.

  “Well, can you rig a portable unit to run the sling?”

  “I can, but it’s not worth taking the time. I’ve got another idea.” Her eyes touched Gardener’s face for a moment, thoughtful and calculating. It was a look Gardener could not quite interpret. Then Bobbi walked away to the lean-to.

  Gardener followed her partway and saw Bobbi swing open a large green metal box that had been mounted on a pole. She pawed through the tools and general junk inside, and then came back with a transistor radio. It was smaller than the ones his helpers had turned into New and Improved satchel charges while Bobbi was recuperating. Gard had never seen this particular radio, before. It was very small.

  One of them brought it out last night, he thought.

  Bobbi pulled up its stubby antenna, inserted a jack in its plastic case and the plug in her ear. Gard was instantly reminded of Freeman Moss, moving the pumping equipment like an elephant trainer moving the big guys around the center ring.

  “This won’t take long.” Bobbi pointed the antenna back toward the farm. Gardener seemed to hear a heavy, powerful hum—not on the air but inside the air, somehow. For just a moment his mind muttered with music and there was a headachy pain in the middle of his forehead, as if he had drunk too much cold water too fast.

  “Now what?”

  “We wait,” Bobbi said, and repeated: “It won’t take long.”

  Her speculative gaze passed over Gardener’s face again, and this time Gardener thought he understood that look. It’s something she wants me to see. And this chance came up to show me.

 

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