Then push that button and get the hell out. Do you understand?"
"Yes," she whispered. "Dennis, will this work?"
She leaned over, placed her left hand tightly on the side of my neck, and
she at all—just an it. Kill it."
"I will," I said.
She looked in my eyes and nodded. "Do it for Arnie," she said. "Set him
hit her little handbag with her knee and it fell to the floor of the cab. She
"Dennis," she said, "do
you remember the
Morte d'Arthur
?"
"A little." One of the classes Leigh and Arnie and I had all shared before my
football injury was Fudgy Bowen's Classics of English Literature, and one of
the first things we had been faced with in there was Malory's
Morte
d'Arthur
. Why Leigh asked me this now was a mystery to me.
She had found what she wanted. It was a filmy pink scarf, nylon, the sort of
thing a girl wears over her head on a day when a misty sort of rain is falling.
She tied it around the left forearm of my parka.
"What the hell?" I asked, smiling a little.
"Be my knight," she said, and smiled back—but her eyes were serious. "Be
my knight, Dennis."
I picked up the squeegee mop she had found in Will's bathroom and made a
clumsy salute with it. "Sure," I said. "Just call me Sir O-Cedar."
"Joke about it if you want," she said, "but don't
really
joke about it. Okay?"
"All right," I said. "If it's what you want, I'll be your parfit goddam gentil
knight."
She laughed a little, and that was better.
"Remember about that button kiddo. Push it hard. We don't want that door to
just burp once and stop on its track. No escapes, right?"
"Right."
She got out of Petunia, and I can close my eyes now and see her as she was
then, in that clean and silent moment just before everything went terribly
wrong—a tall, pretty girl with long blond hair the color of raw honey, slim
hips, long legs, and those striking, Nordic cheekbones, now wearing a ski-
parka and faded Lee Riders, moving with a dancer's grace. I can still see it
and I still dream about it, because of course while we were busy setting up
Christine, she was busy setting us up—that old and infinitely wise monster.
Did we really think we could outsmart her so easily? I guess we did.
My dreams are in terrible slow motion. I can see the softly lovely motion of
her hips as she walks; I can hear the hollow click of her Frye boots on the
oil-stained cement floor; I can ever hear the soft, dry
whish-whish
of her
parka's quilted inner lining brushing against her blouse. She's walking slowly
and her head is up—now
she
is the animal, but no predator; she walks with
the cautious grace of a zebra approaching a waterhole at dusk. It is the walk
of an animal that scents danger. I try to scream to her through Petunia's
windscreen.
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