everywhere
. I
could feel it
(Michael, Jesus why didn't you stay in the house)
in my neck, in my jaw in my
(Arnie? Man, I am so sorry I wish I wish)
temples. The Plymouth—what remained of her—lunged drunkenly down the
side of the garage, spraying tools and junk metal, pulling out struts and
dumping the overhead shelves. The shelves hit the concrete with flat,
clapping sounds that echoed like demon applause.
I stamped the clutch again and floored the gas. Petunia's engine bellowed,
and I hung onto the wheel like a man trying to stay aboard a bucking mustang.
I hit her on the right side and smashed the body clear off the rear axle,
driving it into the door, which shivered and rattled. I went up over the wheel,
which slammed into my belly and drove the breath out of me and dumped me
back into my seat, gasping.
Now I saw Leigh, cowering in the far corner, her hands clapped to her face,
dragging it down into a witch's mask.
Christine's engine was still running.
She dragged herself slowly down toward Leigh, like an animal whose rear
legs have been broken in a trap. And even as she went I could see her
regenerating, coming back: a tire that suddenly popped up full and plump, the
radio aerial that unjointed itself with a silvery
twinggg!
sound, the accretion
of metal around the ruined rear end.
"
Stay dead!
" I screamed at it. I was crying, my chest heaving. My leg
wouldn't work anymore. I braced it with both hands and
jammed
it onto the
clutch. My vision went hazy and gray with the white-metal agony. I could
almost feel the bones grating.
I raced the engine, got first gear again, and charged it; and as I did I heard
LeBay's voice for the first and only time, high and cheated and full of a
terrible, unquenchable fury:
"You SHITTER! Fuck off, you miserable SHITTER! LEAVE ME ALONE!"
"You should have left my friend alone," I tried to yell—but all that would
come out was a tearing, wounded gasp.
I hit it squarely in the rear end, and the gas tank ruptured as the back of the
car accordioned inward and upward in a kind of metal mushroom. There was
a yellow lick of fire. I shielded my face with my hands—but then it was
gone. Christine sat there, a refugee from a demolition derby. Her engine ran
choppily, missed, fired again, and then died.
The place was silent except for the bass rumble of Petunia's engine.
Then Leigh was running across the floor, screaming my name over and over,
crying. I was suddenly, stupidly aware that I was wearing her pink nylon
scarf around the arm of my jacket.
I looked down at it, and then the world grayed out again.
I could feel her hands on me, and then there was nothing but darkness as I
fainted.
I came to about fifteen minutes later, my face wet and blessedly cool. Leigh
was standing on Petunia's driver's side running board, mopping my face with
a wet rag. I caught it in one hand, tried to suck it, and then spat. The rag
tasted strongly of oil.
"Dennis, don't worry," she said. "I ran out into the street… stopped a
snowplow… scared the poor man out of ten years of his life, I think… all
this blood… he said an ambulance… he said he'd, you know… Dennis, are
you all right?"
"Do I
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