Christine (61 page)

Read Christine Online

Authors: Steven King

After that, things became exceedingly weird. I knew, somewhere deep inside, that I was not dreaming—the pain proved that, if it proved nothing else—but all of it
seemed
like a dream. I was pretty well doped, and that was part of it . . . but shock was part of it too. No fake, Jake. My mother was there, crying, in a room that looked sickeningly like the hospital room in which I had spent the entire autumn. Then my father was there, and Leigh's dad was with him, and their faces were both so tight and grim they looked like Tweedledum and Tweedledee as Franz Kafka might have written them. My father bent over me and said in a voice like thunder reverberating through cotton batting: “How did Michael get there, Dennis?” That's what they really wanted to know: how Michael got there.
Oh,
I thought,
oh my friends, I could tell you stories.. . .

Then Mr. Cabot was saying, “What did you get my daughter into, boy?” I seem to remember replying, “It's not what I got her into, it's what she got you out of,” which I still think was pretty witty under the circumstances, doped up the way I was and all.

Elaine was there briefly, and she seemed to be holding a Yodel or a Twinkie or something mockingly out of my reach. Leigh was there, holding her filmy nylon scarf out and asking me to raise my arm so she could tie it on. But I couldn't; my arm was like a lead bar.

Then Arnie was there, and of course that
had
to be a dream.

Thanks, man,
he said, and I noticed with something like terror that the left lens of his glasses was shattered. His face was okay, but that broken lens . . . it scared me.
Thanks. You did okay. I feel better now. I think things are going to be okay now.

No sweat, Arnie,
I said—or tried to say—but he was gone.

It was the next day—not the twentieth, but Sunday, January twenty-first—that I started to come back a little. My left leg was in a cast up in its old familiar position again amid all the pulleys and weights. There was a man I had never seen before sitting to the left of my bed, reading a paperback John D. MacDonald story. He saw me looking at him and lowered his book.

“Welcome back to the land of the living, Dennis,” he said mildly, and deliberately marked his place in the book with a matchbook cover. He put the book in his lap and folded his hands over it.

“Are you a doctor?” I asked. He sure wasn't Dr. Arroway, who had taken care of me last time; this guy was twenty years younger and at least fifty pounds leaner. He looked tough.

“State Police Inspector,” he said. “Richard Mercer is my name. Rick, if you like.” He held out his hand, and stretching awkwardly and carefully, I touched it. I couldn't really shake it. My head ached and I was thirsty.

“Look,” I said. “I don't really mind talking to you, and I'll answer all of your questions, but I'd like to see a doctor.” I swallowed. He looked at me, concerned, and I blurted out, “I need to know if I'm ever going to walk again.”

“If what that fellow Arroway says is the truth,” Mercer said, “you'll be able to get around in four to six weeks. You didn't break it again, Dennis. You severely strained it; that was what he said. It swelled up like a sausage. He also said you were lucky to get off so cheap.”

“What about Arnie?” I asked. “Arnie Cunningham? Do you know—”

His eyes flickered.

“What is it?” I asked. “What is it about Arnie?”

“Dennis,” he said, and then hesitated. “I don't know if this is the time.”


Please.
Is Arnie . . . is he dead?”

Mercer sighed. “Yes, he's dead. He and his mother had an accident on the Pennsylvania Turnpike, in the snow. If it
was
an accident.”

I tried to talk and couldn't. I motioned for the pitcher of water on the bedtable, thinking how dismal it was to be in a hospital room and know exactly where everything was. Mercer poured me a glass and put the straw with the elbow-bend in it. I drank, and it got a little bit better. My throat, that is. Nothing else seemed better at all.

“What do you mean,
if
it was an accident?”

Mercer said, “It was Friday evening, and the snow just wasn't that heavy. The turnpike classification was two—bare and wet, reduced visibility, use appropriate caution. We guess, from the force of impact, that they weren't doing much more than forty-five. The car veered across the median and struck a semi. It was Mrs. Cunningham's Volvo wagon. It exploded.”

I closed my eyes. “Regina?”

“Also DOA. For whatever it's worth, they probably didn't—”

“—suffer,” I finished. “Bullshit. They suffered
plenty.”
I felt tears and choked them back. Mercer said nothing. “All three of them,” I muttered. “Oh Jesus Christ, all three.”

“The driver of the truck broke his arm. That was the worst of it for him. He said that there were three people in the car, Dennis.”

“Three!”

“Yes. And he said they appeared to be struggling.” Mercer looked at me frankly. “We're going on the theory that they picked up a bad-news hitchhiker who escaped after the accident and before the troopers arrived.”

But that was ridiculous, if you knew Regina Cunningham, I thought. She would no more pick up a hitchhiker than she would wear slacks to a faculty tea. The things you did and those you never did were firmly set in Regina Cunningham's mind. As if in cement, you could say.

It had been LeBay. He couldn't be both places at once, that was the thing. And at the end, when he saw how things were going in Darnell's Garage, he had abandoned Christine and had tried to go back to Arnie. What had happened then was anyone's guess. But I thought then—and do now—that Arnie fought him—and earned at least a draw.

“Dead,” I said, and now the tears did come. I was too weak and low to stop them. I hadn't been able to keep him from getting killed, after all. Not the last time, not when it really mattered. Others, maybe, but not Arnie.

“Tell me what happened,” Mercer said. He put his book on the bedtable and leaned forward. “Tell me everything you know, Dennis, from first to last.”

“What has Leigh said?” I asked. “And how is she?”

“She spent Friday night here under observation,” Mercer told me. “She had a concussion and a scalp laceration that took a dozen stitches to close. No marks on her face. Lucky. She's a very pretty girl.”

“She's more than that,” I said. “She's beautiful.”

“She won't say anything,” Mercer said, and a reluctant grin—of admiration, I think—slanted his face to the left. “Not to me, not to her father. He is, shall we say, in a state of high pissoff about the whole thing. She says it's your business what to tell and when to tell.” He looked at me thoughtfully. “Because, she says, you're the one who ended it.”

“I didn't do such a great job,” I muttered. I was still trying to cope with the idea that Arnie could possibly be dead. It was impossible, wasn't it? We had gone to Camp Winnesko in Vermont together when we were twelve, and I got homesick and told him I was going to call and tell my parents they had to come get me. Arnie said if I did, he'd tell everybody at school that the reason I came home early was that they caught me eating boogers in my bunk after lights out and expelled me. We climbed the tree in my back yard to the very top fork and carved our initials there. He used to sleep over at my house and we'd stay up late watching
Shock Theater,
crouched together on the sofa under an old quilt. We ate all those clandestine Wonder Bread sandwiches. When he was fourteen Arnie came to me, scared and ashamed because he was having these sexy dreams and he thought they were making him wet the bed. But it was the ant farms my mind kept coming back to. How could he be dead when we had made those ant farms together? Dear Christ, it seemed like only a week or two ago, those ant farms. So how could he be dead? I opened my mouth to tell Mercer that Arnie couldn't be dead—those ant farms made the very idea absurd. Then I closed my mouth again. I couldn't tell him that. He was just a guy.

Arnie,
I thought.
Hey, man—it's not true, is it? Jesus Christ, we still got too much to do. We never even double-dated at the drive-in yet.

“What happened?” Mercer asked again. “Tell me, Dennis.”

“You'd never believe it,” I said thickly.

“You might be surprised what I'd believe,” he said. “And you might be surprised what we know. A fellow named Junkins was the chief investigator on this case. He was killed not so very far from here. He was a friend of mine. A good friend. A week before he died he told me that he thought something was going on in Libertyville that nobody would believe. Then he was killed. With me that makes it personal.”

I shifted positions cautiously. “He didn't tell you any more?”

“He told me that he believed he had uncovered an old murder,” Mercer said, still not taking his eyes from mine. “But it didn't much matter, he said, because the perpetrator was dead.”

“LeBay,” I muttered, and thought that if Junkins had known about that, it was no wonder Christine had killed him. Because if Junkins had known that, he had been much too close to the whole truth.

Mercer said, “LeBay was the name he mentioned.” He leaned closer. “And I'll tell you something else, Dennis—Junkins was one hell of a driver. When he was younger, before he got married, he used to run stockers at Philly Plains, and he won his share of checkered flags. He went off the road doing better than a hundred and twenty in a Dodge cruiser with a hemi engine. Whoever was chasing him—and we know someone was—had to be one hell of a driver.”

“Yeah,” I said. “He was.”

“I came by myself. I've been here for two hours, waiting for you to wake up. I was here until they kicked me out last night. I don't have a stenographer with me, I don't have a tape recorder, and I assure you that I'm not wearing a wire. When you make a statement—if you ever have to—that'll be a different ball game. But for now, it's you and me. I have to know. Because I see Rudy Junkins's wife and Rudy Junkins's kids from time to time. You dig?”

I thought it over. For a long time I thought it over—nearly five minutes. He sat there and let me do it. At last I nodded. “Okay. But you're still not going to believe it.”

“We'll see,” he said.

I opened my mouth with no idea of what was going to come out. “He was a loser, you know,” I said. “Every high school has to have at least two, it's like a national law. Everyone's dumping ground. Only sometimes . . . sometimes they find something to hold onto and they survive. Arnie had me. And then he had Christine.”

I looked at him, and if I had seen the slightest wrong flicker in those gray eyes that were so unsettlingly like Arnie's . . . well, if I had seen that, I think I would have clammed up right there and told him to put it on his books in whatever way seemed the most plausible and to tell Rudy Junkins's kids whatever the hell he pleased.

But he only nodded, watching me closely.

“I just wanted you to understand that,” I said, and then a lump rose in my throat and I couldn't say what I maybe should have said next:
Leigh Cabot came later.

I drank some more water and swallowed hard. I talked for the next two hours.

• • •

At last I finished. There was no big climax; I simply dried up, my throat sore from so much talking. I didn't ask if he believed me; I didn'
t ask him if he was going to have me locked up in a loonybin or give me a liars' medal. I knew that he believed a great deal of it, because what I knew dovetailed too well with what he knew. What he thought about the rest of it—Christine and LeBay and the past reaching out its hands toward the present—that I didn't know. And don't to this day. Not really.

A little silence fell between us. At last he slapped his hands down on his thighs with a brisk sound and got to his feet. “Well!” he said. “Your folks will be waiting to visit you, no doubt.”

“Probably, yeah.”

He took out his wallet and produced a small white business card with his name and number on it. “I can usually be reached here, or someone will throw me a relay. When you speak to Leigh Cabot again, would you tell her what you've told me and ask her to get in touch?”

“Yes, if you want. I'll do that.”

“Will she corroborate your story?”

“Yes.”

He looked at me fixedly. “I'll tell you this much, Dennis,” he said. “If you're lying, you don't know you are.”

He left. I only saw him once more, and that was at the triple funeral for Arnie and his parents. The papers reported a tragic and bizarre fairy tale—father killed in driveway car accident while mother and son are killed on Pennsylvania Turnpike. Paul Harvey used it on his program.

No mention was made of Christine being at Darnell's Garage.

• • •

My family came to visit that night, and by then I was feeling much easier in my mind—part of it was baring my bosom to Mercer, I think (he was what one of my psych profs in college called “an interested outsider,” the sort it's often easiest to talk to), but a great lot of the way I felt was due to a flying late-afternoon visit by Dr. Arroway. He was out of temper and irascible with me, suggesting that next time I just take a chainsaw to the goddam leg and save us all a lot of time and trouble . . . but he also informed me (grudgingly, I think) that no lasting damage had been done. He thought. He warned me that I had not improved my chances of ever running in the Boston Marathon and left.

So the family visit was a gay one—due mostly to Ellie, who prattled on and on about that upcoming cataclysm, her First Date. A pimply, bullet-headed nerd named Brandon Hurling had invited her to go roller skating with him. My dad was going to drive them. Pretty cool.

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