29
“Well?” Orphan Annie’s whisper was almost too fierce to be called one. “Do you believe me
now, Mr. Corbett Denton?”
Drummer didn’t reply at first, because he was trying to process what he was looking at: three
vans parked side by side, and beyond them, a cluster of men and women. Looked like nine of
them, enough to field a damn baseball team. And Annie was right, they were armed. It was
twilight now, but the light lingered long in late summer, and besides, the streetlights had come
on. Drummer could see holstered sidearms and two long guns that looked to him like HKs.
People-killing machines. The baseball team was clustered near
the front of the old movie
theater, but mostly shielded from the sidewalk by its brick flank. They were obviously waiting
for something.
“They got scouts!” Annie hissed. “See them crossing the street? They’ll
be checking the
sheriff’s to see how many are in there! Will you get your goddam guns now, or do I have to go
get em myself?”
Drummer turned, and for the first time in twenty years, maybe even thirty, broke into a full-
out run. He mounted the steps to the apartment over his barber
shop and stopped on the
landing long enough to tear in three or four huge breaths. Also long enough to wonder if his
heart would be able to stand the strain or if it would simply explode.
His .30–06, which he planned to shoot himself with one of these fine South Carolina nights
(might have done it already, if not for an occasional interesting conversation with the town’s
new night knocker) was in the closet, and it was loaded. So were the .45 automatic pistol and
.38 revolver on the high shelf.
He took all three weapons and ran back down the stairs, panting and sweating and probably
stinking like a hog in a steambath, but feeling fully alive for the first time in years. He listened
for the sound of shooting, but so far there was nothing.
Maybe they’re cops, he thought, but that seemed unlikely. Cops would have walked right in,
showed their IDs, and announced their business. Also, they would have come in black SUVs,
Suburbans or Escalades.
At least that was the way they did it on TV.
30
Nick Wilholm led the ragtag troop of lost boys and girls back down the slightly slanted tunnel
to the locked door on the Front Half side. Some of the Ward A inmates followed; some just
milled around. Pete Littlejohn began to hit the top of his head again, yelling, “Ya-
ya
-ya-
ya
-ya-
ya
.” There was an echo in the tunnel that made his rhythmic
chant not just annoying but
maddening.
“Join hands,” Nicky said. “All of us.” He lifted his chin to indicate the milling gorks, and
added,
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