well blame Ronald McDonald. People choke on their food every now and
think I've only got the strength to say this once. Will you listen?"
"If it's about Christine, you're wasting your breath, he said, and that stubborn,
She took a deep breath, ignoring the pull in her chest. She looked at
Christine, idling a plume of white vapor into the thickly falling snow, then
yellow eyes of a lynx.
He laughed, a short bark in the cold air. In the house a curtain was pulled
aside, someone looked out, and then the curtain dropped back again.
"If that hitchhiker… that Gottfried fellow… if he hadn't been there, I would
have died, Arnie. I would have
died
." She searched his eyes with her own
and pushed ahead. Once, she told herself.
I only have to say this once
. "You
told me that you worked in the cafeteria at LHS your first three years. I've
seen the Heimlich Maneuver poster on the door to the kitchen. You must have
seen it too. But you didn't try that on me, Arnie. You were getting ready to
clap me on the back. That doesn't work. I had a job in a restaurant back in
Massachusetts, and the first thing they teach you, even before they teach you
the Heimlich Maneuver, is that clapping a choking victim on the back doesn't
work."
"What are you saying?" he asked in a thin, out-of-breath voice.
She didn't answer; only looked at him. He met her gaze for only a moment,
and then his eyes—angry, confused, almost haunted—shifted away.
"Leigh, people forget things. You're right, I should have used it. But if you
had the course, you know you can use it on yourself." Arnie laced his hands
together into a fist with one thumb sticking up and pressed against his
diaphragm to demonstrate. "It's just that in the heat of the moment, people
forget—"
"Yes, they do. And you seem to forget a lot of things in that car. Like how to
be Arnie Cunningham."
Arnie was shaking his head. "You need time to think this over, Leigh. You
need—"
"That is just what I don't need!" she said with a fierceness she wouldn't have
believed she still had left in her. "I never had a supernatural experience in my
life—I never even believed in stuff like that—but now I wonder just what's
going on and what's happening to you. They looked like eyes, Arnie. And
later… afterward… there was a smell, A horrible, rotten smell."
He recoiled.
"You know what I'm talking about."
No. I don't have the slightest idea."
"You just jumped as if the devil had twisted your ear."
"You're imagining things," Arnie said hotly. "A lot of things."
"That smell was
there
. And there are other things as well. Sometimes your
radio won't get anything but that oldies station—"
Another flicker in his eyes, and a slight twitch at the left corner of his mouth.
"And sometimes when we're making out it just stalls, as if it didn't like it.
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