protest. The tachometer needle hit 6,000 rpm, danced briefly at redline-
7,000, and then dropped back to a more normal range. Backfires blatted
up, tramped on the accelerator pedal, and let his body sway freely as the
Camaro's left rear end slammed into the snowbanks digging a coffin-sized
respond, that the skid would continue and they would simply barrel sideways
up the road at seventy-five until they hit a bare patch and flipped over.
But the Camaro straightened out.
"Holy Jesus Buddy slow down!" Richie wailed.
Buddy hung over the wheel, grinning through his beard, bloodshot eyes
bulging. The bottle of Driver was clamped between his legs.
There! There,
you crazy murdering sonofabitch. Let's see you do that without rolling it
over!
. A moment later the headlights reappeared, closer than ever, Buddy's
grin faltered and faded. For the first time he felt a sickish, unmanning tingle
running up his legs toward his crotch, Fear—real fear—stole into him.
Bobby had been looking behind as the car chased them round the bend, and
now he turned around, his face slack and cheesy. "It dint even skid," he said.
"But that's impossible! That's—"
"Buddy, who is it?" Richie asked.
He reached out to touch Buddy's elbow, and his hand was flung away with
such force that his knuckles cracked on the glass of his window.
"You don't want to touch me," Buddy whispered. The road rolled straight in
front of him, not black tar now but white snow, packed and treacherous. The
Camaro was rolling over this greasy surface at better than ninety miles an
hour, only its roof and the orange Ping-Pong ball jammed on the top of its
radio aerial visible between chest-high embankments. "You don't want to
touch me, Richie. Not going this fast."
"Is it—" Richie's voice cracked and he couldn't go on.
Buddy spared him a glance, and at the sight of the fear in Buddy's small red
eyes, Richie's own terror came up in his throat like hot, smooth oil.
"Yeah," Buddy said. "I think it is."
No houses up here; they were already on state land. Nothing up here but the
high snow embankments and the dark interlacing of trees.
"It's gonna bump us!" Bobby screeched from the back seat. His voice was as
high as an old woman's. Between his feet the remaining bottles of Texas
Driver chattered wildly in their carton. "Buddy! It's gonna bump us!"
The car behind them had come to within five feet of the Camaro's back
bumper; its high beams flooded the car with light bright enough to read fine
print. It slipped forward even closer. A moment later there was a thud.
The Camaro shifted its stance on the road as the car behind them fell back a
trifle; to Buddy it was as if they were suddenly floating, and he knew they
were a hair's breadth from going into a wild, looping skid, the front end and
the rear briskly swapping places until they hit something and rolled.
A droplet of sweat, as warm and stinging as a tear, ran into his eye.
Gradually, the Camaro straightened out again.
When he felt that he had control, Buddy let his right foot smoothly depress the
accelerator all the way. If it was Cunningham in that old rustbucket '58—ah,
and hadn't that been part of the dreams he could barely remember—the
Camaro would shut him down.
The engine was now screaming. The tach needle was again on the edge of the
redline at 7,000 rpm. The speedometer had passed the one hundred post, and
the snowbanks streamed past them on either side in ghastly silence. The road
ahead looked like a point-of-view shot in a film that had been insanely
speeded up.
"Oh dear God," Bobby babbled, "oh dear God please don't let me get killed
oh dear God oh holy shit—"
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