Buddy considered.
rupture. Then you can write I HATE NIGGERS all over your fuckin truss."
turn on a light and had got a whopper of an electric shock. "Sorry."
Bobby handed the Driver up front with alacrity. His hand was shaking.
Buddy killed the bottle. They passed a sign which read SQUANTIC HILLS
STATE PARK 3 mi. The lake at the center of the state park was a popular
beach area in the summertime, but the park was closed from November to
April. The road which wound through the park to Squantic Lake was kept
ploughed for periodic National Guard maneuvers and winter Explorer Scouts
camping trips, however, and Buddy had discovered a side entrance which
went around the main gate and then joined the park road. Buddy liked to go
into the silent, wintry state park and cruise and drink.
Behind them, the distant twin sparks had grown to circles—dual headlights
about a mile back.
"Hand me another Molotov cocktail, you fucking racist pig."
Bobby handed up a fresh bottle of Driver, remaining prudently silent.
Buddy drank deeply, belched, and then handed the bottle across to Richie.
"No thanks, man."
"You drink it, or you may find yourself getting an enema with it."
"Sure, okay," Richie said, wishing mightily that he had stayed home tonight.
He drank.
The Camaro sped along, its headlights cutting the night. Buddy glanced into
the rearview and saw the other car. It was now coming up fast. He glanced at
his speedometer and saw he was doing sixty-five. The car behind them had to
be doing close to seventy. Buddy felt something—a curious kind of doubling
back to the dreams he could not quite remember. A cold finger seemed to
press lightly against his heart.
Ahead, the road branched in two, Route 46 continuing east toward New
Stanton, the other road bearing north toward Squantic Hills State Park. A
large orange sign advised: CLOSED WINTER MONTHS.
Barely slowing, Buddy dragged left and shot up the hill. The approach road
to the park was not so well-plowed, and overarching trees had kept the warm
afternoon sun from melting off the snowpack. The Camaro slid a little before
grabbing the road again. In the back seat, Bobby Stanton made a low, uneasy
sound.
Buddy looked up in the rearview, expecting to see the other car shoot by
along 46—after all, there was nothing up this road but a dead end as far as
most drivers were concerned—but instead it took the turn eyen faster than
Buddy had and pounded along after them, now less than a quarter of a mile
behind. Its headlights were four glowing white circles that washed the
Camaro's interior.
Bobby and Richie turned around to look.
"What the fuck?" Richie muttered.
But Buddy knew. Suddenly he knew. It was the car that had run down
Moochie. Oh yes it was. The psycho who had greased Moochie was behind
the wheel of that car, and now he was after Buddy.
He stepped down on the go, and the Camaro started to fly. The speedometer
needle crept up to seventy and then gradually heeled over toward eighty.
Trees blurred past, dark sketches in the night. The lights behind them did not
fall back; the truth was that they were still gaining. The duals had merged into
two great white eyes.
"Man I you want to slow down," Richie said. He grabbed for his seatbelt,
actively scared now. "If we roll at this speed—"
Buddy didn't answer. He hunched over the wheel, alternating glances at the
road ahead with glances shot into the rearview mirror, where those lights
grew and grew.
"The road curves up ahead," Bobby said hoarsely. And as the curve
approached, guardrail reflectors flickering chrome in the Camaro's
headlights, he screamed it:
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: