Yes, they could say that, just as Will could dream of dancing with fifteen-
year-old Wanda Haskins but the reality was a hard-headed man of sixty-one,
a man who had long since jettisoned any last romantic notions.
And he had
seen
Cunningham's '58 glide across the garage empty, the steering
wheel moving all by itself as the car slipped into her accustomed stall. He
had
seen
the headlights go off, and he had heard the eight-cylinder engine as
it died.
Now, feeling oddly boneless, Will Darnell got up, hesitated, went to the door
of his office, hesitated again, and then opened it. He walked out and moved
down the ranks of slant-parked cars to stall twenty. His footfalls echoed
behind him and then died out in a mystery.
He stood beside the car with her rich two-tone body, red and white. The
paint job was deep and clear and perfect, unmarred by the smallest chip or
the slightest touch of rust. The glass was clear and unbroken, not marked by
so much as a nick caused by a random-flying pebble.
The only sound now was the slow drip of melting snow from the front and
rear bumpers.
Will touched the hood. It was warm.
He tried the driver's side door, and it opened freely. The smell that issued
forth was the warm smell of new leather, new plastic, new chrome—except
that there seemed to be another, more unpleasant smell beneath it. An earthy
smell. Will breathed deep but could not place it. He thought briefly of old
turnips in his father's basement vegetable bin, and his nose wrinkled.
He leaned in. There were no keys in the ignition. The odometer read
52,107.8.
Suddenly the empty ignition slot set into the dashboard revolved, the black
slit heeling over of its own accord past ACC to START. The hot engine
caught at once and rumbled steadily, full of contented high-octane power.
Will's heart staggered in his chest. His breath caught. Gasping and whooping
noisily for breath, he hurried back to his office to find the spare aspirator in
one of his desk drawers. His breath, thin and impotent, sounded like winter
wind under an entryway door. His face was the color of old candlewax. His
fingers caught in the loose flesh of his throat and pulled restlessly.
Christine's engine turned off again.
No sound now but the tick and click of cooling metal.
Will found his aspirator, plunged it deep into his throat, depressed the trigger,
and inhaled. Little by little, the feeling that a wheelbarrowful of cinderblocks
was sitting on his chest dissipated. He sat down in the swivel chair and
listened gratefully to the sane and expected creak of protest from its springs.
He covered his face momentarily with his fat hands.
Nothing really inexplicable… until now.
He had
seen it.
Nothing had been driving that car. It had come in empty, smelling of
something like rotting turnips.
And even then, in spite of his dread, Will's mind began to turn and he began
wondering how he could put what he knew to his own advantage.