Playing with me,
Buddy thought.
Playing with me, that's what it's doing.
Like a cat with a mouse.
"Please," he croaked. The headlights were blinding, turning the blood
dripping down his cheek and from the sides of his mouth to an insectile
black. "Please… I… I'll tell him I'm sorry… I'll crawl to him on my fucking
hands and knees if that's what… you want only please… pl—
The engine screamed. Christine leaped at him like old doom from a dark age.
Buddy howled and lunged aside again, and this time the bumper struck his
shin and broke his other leg and threw him toward the embankment at the side
of the park road. He hit and sprawled like a loose bag of grain.
Christine wheeled back toward him, but Buddy bad seen a chance, one thin
chance. He began to scramble wildly up the embankment, digging into the
snow with bare hands from which the feeling had already departed, digging
with his feet, ignoring the tremendous clouts of pain from his shattered legs.
Now his breath came in little screams as the headlights grew brighter and the
engine louder; every clod of snow threw its own jagged black shadow and he
could feel it, he could feel it behind him like some horrible man-eating tiger
—
There was a crunch and jangle of metal, and Buddy cried out as one of his
feet was driven into the snow by Christine's bumper. He yanked it out of the
snow, leaving his shoe wedged deep.
Lying, gibbering, crying, Buddy gained the top of the bank thrown up by some
National Guard Motor Pool plough days ago, tottered on the edge of balance
there, pinwheeled his arms, and barely kept from rolling back down.
He turned to face Christine, The Plymouth had reversed across the road and
now came forward again, rear tires spinning, digging at the snow. It crashed
into the bank a foot below where Buddy was perched, making him sway and
sending down a further avalanche of snow. The hit crimped her hood in
further, but Buddy was not touched. She reversed again through a mist of
churned-up snow, engine now seeming to howl with frustrated anger.
Buddy screamed in triumph and shook his middle finger at her.
"Fuck you!
Fuck you! Fuck you!"
A spray of mixed blood and spittle flew from his lips.
With each gasping breath, the pain seemed to sink deeper into his left side,
numbing and paralyzing.
Christine roared forward and slammed into the embankment again.
This time a large section of the bank, loosened in the car's first charge, came
sliding down, burying Christine's wrinkled, snarling snout, and Buddy almost
came down with it. He saved himself only by skittering backward rapidly,
sliding on his butt and pulling himself with hands that were clawed into the
snow like bloody grappling hooks. His legs were in agony now, and he
flopped over on his side, gasping like a beached fish.
Christine came again.
"Get outta
here!"
Buddy cried. "Get outta
here,
you crazy
WHORE!"
She slammed into the embankment again, and this time enough snow fell to
douse her hood to the windscreen. The wipers came on and began to arc back
and forth, flicking melting snow away.
She reversed again, and Buddy saw that one more hit would sent him
cascading down onto Christine's hood with the snow. He let himself fall over
backward and went rolling down the far side of the embankment, screaming
each time his broken ribs bumped the ground. He came to rest in loose
powder, staring up at black sky, the cold stars. His teeth began to click
helplessly together. Shudders raced through his body.
Christine didn't come again, but he could hear the soft mutter of her engine.
Not coming, but waiting.
He glanced at the snowbank bulking against the sky. Beyond it, the glow of
the burning Camaro had begun to wane a bit. How long had it been since the
crash? He didn't know. Would anyone see the fire and come to rescue him?
He didn't know that either.
Buddy became aware of two things simultaneously: that blood was flowing
from his mouth—flowing at a frightening rate—and that he was very cold. He
would freeze to death if someone didn't come.
Frightened all over again, he struggled and thrashed his way into a sitting
position. He was trying to decide if he could worm his way back up and
watch the car—it was worse, not being able to see it—when he glanced up at
the embankment again. His breath snagged and stopped.
A man was standing there.
Only it wasn't a man at all; it was a corpse. A rotting corpse in green pants. It
was shirtless, but a back brace splotched with gray mould was cinched
around its blackening torso. White bone gleamed through the skin stretched
across its face.
"That's it for you, you shitter," this starlit apparition whispered.
The last of Buddy's control broke and he began to scream hysterically, his
eyes bulging, his long hair seeming to puff into a grotesque helmet around his
bloody, soot-smudged face as the root of each strand stiffened and stood on
end. Blood poured from his mouth in freshets and drenched the collar of his
parka; he tried to skid backward, hooking into the snow with his hands again
and sliding his buttocks as the thing came toward him. It had no eyes. Its eyes
were gone, eaten out of its face by God knew what squirming things.
And he
could smell it, oh God he could smell it and the smell was like rotting
tomatoes, the smell was death.
The corpse of Roland D. LeBay held out its decayed hands to Buddy
Repperton and grinned.
Buddy screamed. Buddy howled. And suddenly he stiffened, his lips forming
an O of perfect finality, puckered as if he wished to kiss the horror shambling
toward him. His hands scratched and scrabbled at the left side of his
shredded parka above his heart, which had finally been punctured by the
jagged stub of a splintered rib. He fell backward feet kicking groove in the
snow, his final breath slipping out in a long white jet from his slack mouth
like auto exhaust.
On the embankment, the thing he had seen flickered and was gone. There
were no tracks.
From the far side, Christine's engine cranked up into an exhaust-crackling
bellow of triumph that struck the frowning, snow-covered uplands of
Squantic Hills and then echoed back.
On the far verge of Squantic Lake, some ten miles away as the crow flies, a
young man who had gone out for a cross-country ski by starlight heard the
sound and suddenly stopped, his hands on his poles and his head cocked.
Abruptly the skin on his back prickled into bumps, as if a goose had just
walked over his grave, and although he knew it was only a car somewhere on
the other side—sound carried a long way up here on still winter nights—his
first thought was that something prehistoric had awakened and had tracked its
prey to earth: a great wolf, or perhaps a saber-toothed tiger.
The sound was not repeated and he went on his way.
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