back off… something
. But Christine only went rolling along.
The mall was thronged with hectic but mostly good-natured shoppers; the last
frantic and sometimes ugly Christmas rush was better than two weeks off.
The Yuletide spirit was still new enough to be novel, and it was possible to
look at the tinsel strung through the wide mall hallways without feeling sour
and Ebenezer Scroogey. The steady ringing of the Salvation Army Santas'
bells had not yet become a guilty annoyance; they still chanted good tidings
and good will rather than the monotonous, metallic chant of The poor have no
Christmas the poor have no Christmas the poor have no Christmas that Arnie
always seemed to hear as the day grew closer and both the shopgirls and the
Salvation Army Santas grew more harried and hollow-eyed.
They held hands until the parcels grew too many for that, and then Arnie
complained goodnaturedly about how she was turning him into her beast of
burden. As they were going down to the lower level and B. Dalton, where
Arnie wanted to look for a book on toy-making for Dennis Guilder's old man,
Leigh noticed that it had begun to snow. They stood for a moment at the
window of the glassed-in stairwell, looking out like children. Arnie took her
hand and Leigh looked at him, smiling. He could smell her skin, clean and a
bit soapy; he could smell the fragrance of her hair. He moved his head
forward a bit; she moved hers a bit toward him. They kissed lightly and she
squeezed his hand. Later, after the bookstore, they stood above the rink in the
center of the mall, watching the skaters as they dipped and pirouetted and
swooped to the sound of Christmas carols.
It was a very good day right up until the moment that Leigh Cabot almost
died.
She almost surely would have died, if not for the hitchhiker.
They had been on their way back then, and an early December twilight had
long since turned to snowy dark. Christine, surefooted as usual, purred easily
through the four inches of fresh light powder.
Arnie had made a reservation for an early dinner at the British Lion Steak
House, Libertyville's only really good restaurant, but the time had gotten
away from them and they had agreed on a quick to-go meal from the
McDonald's on JFK Drive. Leigh had promised her mother she would be in
by eight-thirty because the Cabots were "having friends in" and it had been
quarter of eight when they left the mall.
"Just as well," Arnie said. "I'm damn near broke anyway."
The headlights picked out the hitchhiker standing at the intersection of Route
17 and JFK Drive, still five miles outside of Libertyville. His black hair was
shoulder-length, speckled with snow, and there was a duffel-bag between his
feet.
As they approached him, the hitchhiker held up a sign painted with Day-Glo
letters It read: LIBERTYVILLE, PA. As they drew closer, he flipped it over.
The other side read: NON-PSYCHO COLLEGE STUDENT.
Leigh burst out laughing. "Let's give him a ride, Arnie."
Arnie said, "When they go out of their way to advertise their non-psychotic
status, that's when you got to look out. But okay." He pulled over. That
evening he would have tried to catch the moon in a bushel basket if Leigh had
asked him to give it a shot.
Christine rolled smoothly to the verge of the road, tires barely slipping. But
as they stopped, static blared across the radio, which had been playing some
hard rock tune, and when the static cleared, there was the Big Bopper,
singing "Chantilly Lace".
"What happened to the Block Party Weekend?" Leigh asked as the hitchhiker
ran toward them.
"I don't know," Arnie said, but he knew. It had happened before. Sometimes
all that Christine's radio would pick up was WDIL. It didn't matter what
buttons you pushed or how much you fooled with the FM converter tinder the
dashboard; it was WDIL or nothing.
He suddenly felt that stopping for the hitchhiker had been a mistake.
But it was too late for second thoughts now; the fellow had opened one of
Christine's rear doors, tossed his duffel-bag onto the floor, and slipped in
after it. A blast of cold air and a swirl of snow came in with him.
"Ah, man, thanks." He sighed. "My fingers and toes all took off for Miami
Beach about twenty minutes ago. They must have gone somewhere, anyway
cause I sure can't feel 'em anymore."
"Thank my lady," Arnie said shortly.
"Thank you, ma'am," the hitchhiker said, tipping an invisible hat gallantly.
"Don't mention it," Leigh said, and smiled. "Merry Christmas."
"Same to you," the hitchhiker said, "although you'd never know there was
such a thing if you'd been standing out there trying to hook a ride tonight.
People just breeze by and then they're gone.
Voom
." He looked around
appreciatively. "Nice car, man. Hell of a nice car."
"Thanks," Arnie said.
"You restore it yourself?"
"Yeah."
Leigh was looking at Arnie, puzzled. His earlier expansive mood had been
replaced by a curtness that was not like his usual self at all. On the radio, the
Big Bopper finished and Richie Valens came on, doing "La Bamba".
The hitchhiker shook his head and laughed. "First the Big Bopper, then
Richie Valens. Must be death night on the radio. Good old WDIL."
"What do you mean?" Leigh asked.
Arnie snapped the radio off. "They died in a plane crash. With Buddy Holly."
"Oh," Leigh said in a small voice.
Perhaps the hitchhiker also sensed the change in Arnie's mood; he fell silent
and meditative in the back seat. Outside, the snow began to fall faster and
harder. The first good storm of the season had come in.
At length, the golden arches twinkled up out of the snow.
"Do you want me to go in, Arnie?" Leigh asked. Arnie had gone nearly as
quiet as stone, turning aside her bright attempts at conversation with mere
grunts.
"I will," he said, and pulled in. "What do you want?" "Just a hamburger and
french fries, please." She had intended to go the whole hog—Big Mac, shake,
even the cookies—but her appetite seemed to have shrunk away to nothing.
Arnie parked. In the yellow light flaring from the squat brick building's
undersides, his face looked jaundiced and somehow diseased. He turned
around, arm trailing over the seat. "Can I grab you something?"
"No thanks," the hitchhiker said. "Folks'll be waiting supper. Can't disappoint
my mom. She kills the fatted calf every time I come h—"
The chunk of door cut off his final word. Arnie had gotten out and was
headed briskly across to the IN door, his boots kicking up little puffs of new
snow.
"Is he always that cheery?" the hitchhiker asked "Or does he get sorta taciturn
sometimes?"
"He's very sweet," Leigh said firmly. She was suddenly nervous. Arnie had
turned off the engine and taken the keys, and she was left alone with this
stranger in the back seat. She could see him in the rearview mirror, and
suddenly his long black hair, tangled by the wind, his scruff of beard, and his
dark eyes made him seem Manson-like and wild.
"Where do you go to school?" she asked. Her fingers were plucking at her
slacks, and she made them stop.
"Pitt," the hitchhiker said, and no more. His eyes met hers in the mirror, and
Leigh dropped hers hastily to her lap. Cranberry red slacks. She had worn
them because Arnie had once told her he liked them—probably because they
were the tightest pair she owned, even tighter than her Levi's. She suddenly
wished she had worn something else, something that could be considered
provocative by no stretch of the imagination: a grain-sack, maybe. She tried
to smile—it was a funny thought, all right, a grain-sack, get it, ha-ha-ho-ho,
wotta knee-slapper—but no smile came. There was no way she could keep
from admitting it to herself: Arnie had left her alone with this stranger (as
punishment? it had been her idea to pick him up), and now she was scared.
"Bad vibes," the hitchhiker said suddenly, making her actually catch her
breath. His words were flat and final. She could see Arnie through the plate-
glass window, standing fifth or sixth in line. He wouldn't get up to the counter
for a while. She found herself imagining the hitchhiker suddenly clamping his
gloved hands around her throat. Of course she could reach the horn-ring…
but would the horn sound? She found herself doubting it for no sane reason at
all. She found herself thinking that she could hit the horn ninety-nine times
and it would honk satisfyingly. But if, on the hundredth, she was being
strangled by this hitchhiker on whose behalf she had interceded, the horn
wouldn't blow. Because… because Christine didn't like her. In fact, she
believed that Christine hated her guts. It was as simple as that. Crazy but
simple.
"P-Pardon me?" She glanced back in the rearview mirror and was
immeasurably relieved to see that the hitchhiker wasn't looking at her at all;
he was glancing around the car. He touched the seat cover with his palm, then
lightly brushed the roof upholstery with the tips of his fingers.
"Bad vibes," he said, and shook his head. "This car, I don't know why, but I
get bad vibes."
"Do you?" she asked, hoping her voice sounded neutral.
"Yeah. I got stuck in an elevator once when I was a little kid. Ever since then
I get attacks of claustrophobia. I never had one in a car before, but boy, I got
one now. In the worst way. I think you could light a kitchen match on my
tongue, that's how dry my mouth is."
He laughed a short, embarrassed laugh.
"If I wasn't already so late, I'd just get out and walk. No offence to you or
your guy's car," he added hastily, and when Leigh looked back into the mirror
his eyes did not seem wild at all, only nervous. Apparently he wasn't kidding
about the claustrophobia, and he no longer looked like Charlie Manson to her
at all. Leigh wondered how she could have been so stupid… except she
knew how, and why. She knew perfectly well.
It was the car. All day long she had felt perfectly okay riding in Christine, but
now her former nervousness and dislike were back. She had merely
projected her feelings onto a hitchhiker because… well, because you could
be scared and nervous about some guy you just picked up off the road, but it
was insane to be scared by a car, an inanimate construct of steel and glass
and plastic and chrome. That wasn't just a little eccentric, it was
insane
.
"You don't smell anything, do you?" he asked abruptly.
"Smell anything?"
"A bad smell."
"No, not at all." Her fingers were plucking at the bottom of her sweater now,
pulling off wisps of angora. Her heart was knocking unpleasantly in her
chest. "It must be part of your claustrophobia whatzis."
"I guess so."
But she
could
smell it. Under the good new smells of leather and upholstery
there was a faint odor: something like gone-over eggs. Just a whiff a
lingering whiff.
"Mind if I crank the window down a little?"
"If you want," Leigh said, and found it took some effort to keep her voice
steady and casual. Suddenly her mind's eye showed her the picture that had
been in the paper yesterday morning, a picture of Moochie Welch probably
culled from the yearbook. The caption beneath read:
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