Come back, Leigh, come back quick, you were right, you heard
something, she's out there now, out there in the snow with her headlights
off, crouched down, Leigh, come back!
She stopped suddenly, her hands tensing into fists, and that was when sudden
savage circles of light sprang to life in the snowy dark outside. They were
like white eyes opening.
Leigh froze, hideously exposed on the open floor. She was thirty feet inside
the door and slightly to the right of center. She turned toward the headlights,
and I could see the dazed, uncertain expression on her face.
I was just as stunned, and that first vital moment passed unused. Then the
headlights sprang forward and I could see the dark, low-slung shape of
Christine behind them; I could hear the mounting, furious howl of her engine
as she leaped toward us from across the street where she had been waiting
all along—maybe even since before dark. Snow tunnelled back from her roof
and skirted across her windscreen in filmy nets that were, almost instantly
melted by the defroster. She hit the tarmac leading up to the entrance, still
gaining speed. Her engine was a V-8 scream of rage.
"
Leigh!
" I screamed, and clawed for Petunia's ignition switch.
Leigh broke to the right and ran for the wall-button. Christine roared inside
as she reached it and pushed it. I heard the rattle-rumble of the overhead door
descending on its track.
Christine came in angling to the right, going for Leigh. She dug a great clout
of dry wood and splinters from the wall. There was a metallic screech as
part of her right bumper pulled loose—a sound like a drunk's scream of
laughter. Sparks cascaded across the floor as she went into a long, slewing
turn. She missed Leigh, but she wouldn't when she went back; Leigh was
stuck in that right-hand corner with nowhere to hide. She might be able to
make it outside, but I was terribly afraid that the door wasn't coming down
fast enough to cut off Christine. The descending door might peel off her roof,
but that wouldn't stop her and I knew it.
Petunia's engine bellowed and I dragged out the headlight button. Her brights
came on, splashing over the closing door, and over Leigh. She was backed up
against the wall, her eyes wide. Her parka took on a weird, almost electric
blue color in the headlights, and my mind informed me with sickening and
clinical accuracy that her blood would look purple.
I saw her glance upward for a moment and then back down at Christine.
The Fury's tires screamed violently as she leaped at Leigh. Smoke rose from
the new black marks on the concrete, and I just had time to register the fact
that there were
people
inside of Christine: a whole carload of them.
At the same instant that Christine roared toward her, Leigh leaped upward
with a big ungainly Jack-in the box spring. My mind, seeming to run at a
speed approaching light, wondered for a moment if she was intending to leap
right over the Plymouth, as if, instead of Fryes, she wore boots of the seven-
league variety.
Instead, she caught and gripped the rusted metal struts which supported an
overhead shelf about nine feet above the floor, over three feet above her
head. This shelf skirted all four walls. On the night Arnie and I had first
brought Christine in, that entire shelf had been crammed with recapped tires
and old baldies waiting to be recapped—in some funny way it had reminded
me of a well-stocked library shelf. Now it was mostly empty. Holding those
angled struts, Leigh swung her jeaned legs up like a kid who means to throw
his legs right over his own shoulders—what we used to call skinning the cat
in grammar school. Christine's snout smashed into the wall directly below
her. If she had been any slower getting her legs up, they would have been
mashed off at the knees. A piece of chrome flew. Two of the remaining tires
tumbled from the shelf and bounced crazily on the cement like giant rubber
doughnuts.
Leigh's head smashed back against the wall with battering, dazing force as
Christine reversed,
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