Darnell says with no sympathy at all.
And Darnell tells his first and only lie during the interview with Junkins:
I
really didn't notice.
He noticed, all right, and he knows why Arnie is lying about it, trying to
minimize it, and this cop would know why too, if it wasn't so obvious he was
walking all over it instead of seeing it. Cunningham is lying because the
damage was
horrible,
the damage was much worse than this state gumshoe
can imagine, those hoods didn't just beat up on Cunningham's
'58,
they
killed
it. Cunningham is lying because, although nobody saw him do much of
anything during the week after the tow-truck brought Christine back to stall
twenty,
the car was basically as good as new-even better than it had been
before.
Cunningham lied to the cop because the truth was incredible.
"Incredible," Darnell said out loud, and drank the rest of his coffee. He
looked down at the telephone, reached for it, and then drew his hand back.
He had a call to make, but it might be better to finish thinking this through
first—have all his ducks in a row.
He himself was the only one (other than Cunningham himself) who could
appreciate the incredibility of what had happened: the car's complete and
total exoneration. Jimmy was too soft in the attic, and the other guys were in
and out, not regular custom at all. Still, there had been comments about what
a fantastic job Cunningham had done; a lot of the guys who had been doing
repairs on their rolling iron during that week in November had used the word
incredible, and several of them had looked uneasy. Johnny Pomberton, who
bought and sold used trucks, had been trying to get an old dumpster he'd
picked up in running shape that week. Johnny knew cars and trucks better
than anyone else in Libertyville, maybe anyone else in all of Pennsylvania.
He told Will frankly and flat-out that he couldn't believe it.
It's like voodoo,
Johnny Pomberton had said, and then uttered a laugh without much humor.
Will only sat there looking politely interested, and after a second or two the
old man shook his head and went away.
Sitting in his office and looking out at the garage, eerily silent in the slack
time that came every year in the weeks before Christmas, Will thought (not
for the first time) that most people would accept anything they saw it happen
right before their very eyes. In a very real sense there was no supernatural,
no abnormal; what happened, happened, and that was the end.
Jimmy Sykes:
Like magic.
Junkins:
He's lying about it, but I'll be goddamned if I know why.
Will pulled open his desk drawer, denting his paunch, and found his note-
minder book for 1978. He paged through it and found his own scrawled
entry:
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: