The smile returned, but this time it was uneasy. Well, he spent more time
For the first and only time since he had taken her to the football game at
more time with Christine, and he hated having her parked in the thirty-day
section of the airport parking lot, out in the wind and the rain, soon to be
He spent more time with Christine.
Was—
"Wrong," he croaked, and the word was almost lost in the slick, mysterious
sound of the falling sleet.
He stood on the walk, looking at his stalled car, marvelously resurrected time
traveler from the era of Buddy Holly and Khrushchev and Laika the Space
Dog, and suddenly he hated it. It had done something to him, he wasn't sure
what. Something.
The dash lights, blurred into football-shaped red eyes by the moisture on the
window, seemed to mock him and reproach him at the same time.
He opened the driver's side door, slipped behind the wheel, and pulled the
door shut again. He closed his eyes. Peace flowed over him and things
seemed to come back together. He had lied to her, yes, but it was a little lie.
A mostly unimportant lie. No—a
completely
unimportant lie.
He reached out without opening his eyes and touched the leather rectangle the
keys were attached to—old and scuffed, the initials R.D.L. burned into it. He
had seen no need to get a new keyring, or a piece of leather with his own
initials on it.
But there was something peculiar about the leather tab the keys were attached
to, wasn't there? Yes. Quite peculiar indeed.
When he had counted out the cash on LeBay's kitchen table and LeBay had
skittered the keys across the red-and-white-checked oilcloth to him, the
rectangle of leather had been scuffed and nicked and darkened by age, the
initials almost obliterated by time and the constant friction of rubbing against
the change in the old man's pocket and the material of the pocket itself.
Now the initials stood out fresh and clear again. They had been renewed.
But, like the lie, that was really unimportant. Sitting inside the metal shell of
Christine's body, he felt very strongly that that was true.
He
knew
it. Quite unimportant, all of it.
He turned the key. The starter whined, but for a long time the engine wouldn't
catch. Wet wires. Of course that was what it was.
"Please," he whispered. "It's all right, don't worry, everything is the same."
The engine fired, missed. The starter whined on and on. Sleet ticked coldly
on the glass. It was safe in here; it was dry and warm. If the engine would
start.
"Come on," Arnie whispered. "Come on, Christine. Come on, hon."
The engine fired again, caught. The dash lights flickered and went out. The
IGN light pulsed weakly again as the motor stuttered, then went out for good
as the beat of the engine smoothed out into a clean hum.
The heater blew warm air gently around his legs, negating the winter chill
outside.
It seemed to him that there were things Leigh could not understand, things she
could never understand. Because she hadn't been around. The pimples. The
cries of
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