I got on my feet just as Arnie raked open Christine's door.
"Arnie!" I shouted. "Hey, man!"
His head jerked up. His eyes were wide and blank and glaring. A line of
grille seemed to be snarling too.
bug on a card. And over them, behind the glass, was Arnie's terrible face, the
face of a devil sick of sin. That face, both hateful and haunted, has lived in
my dreams ever since. Then the face was gone. It was replaced by a skull, a
grinning death's head.
Leigh uttered a high, piercing scream. She had turned around to look, so I
knew that it wasn't just my imagination. She had seen it too.
Christine roared forward, her rear tires spinning snow back. She didn't come
for the Duster, but for me. I think his intention was to grind me to jelly
between his car and mine. It was only my bad left leg that saved me; it
buckled and I fell back inside my Duster, bumping my right hip on the wheel
and honking the horn.
A cold wave of wind buffeted my face. Christine's bright red flank passed
within three feet of me. She roared down the take-out joint's IN drive and
shot onto JFK Drive without slowing, rear end fishtailing. Then she was
gone, still accelerating.
I looked at the snow and could see the fresh zig-zag treads of her tires. She
had missed my open door by no more than three inches.
Leigh was crying. I pulled my left leg into the car with my hands, slammed
the door, and held her. Her arms groped for me blindly and then grasped with
panicky tightness. "It… it wasn't…"
"Shhh, Leigh. Never mind. Don't think about it."
"That wasn't Arnie driving that car! It was a dead person! It was a dead
person!"
"It was LeBay," I said, and now that it had happened, I felt a kind of eerie
calm instead of the trembly, close-call reaction I should have had—that and
the guilt of finally being discovered with my best friend's girl. "It was him,
Leigh. You just met Roland D. LeBay."
She wept, crying out her fear and shock and horror, holding onto me. I was
glad to have her. My left leg throbbed dully. I looked up into the rearview
mirror at the empty slot where Christine had been. Now that it had happened,
it seemed to me that any other conclusion would have been impossible. The
peace of the last two weeks, the simple joy of having Leigh on my side, all of
that now seemed to be the unnatural thing, the false thing—as false as the
phoney war between Hitier's conquest of Poland and the Wehrmacht's rolling
assault on France.
And I began to see the end of things, how it would be.
She looked up at me, her checks wet. "What now, Dennis? What do we do
now?"
"Now we end it."
"How? What do you mean?"
Speaking more to myself than to her, I said, "He needs an alibi. We have to
be ready when he goes away. The garage. Darnell's. I'm going to trap it in
there. Try to kill it." "Dennis, what are you talking about?"
"He'll leave town," I said. "Don't you see?
All
of the people Christine has
killed—they make a ring around Arnie.
He'll
know that.
He'll
get Arnie out
of town again."
LeBay, you mean.
I nodded, and Leigh shuddered.
"We have to kill it. You know that."
"But how? Please, Dennis… how are we going to do it?"
And at last I had an idea.