A Very Tight Place by Stephen King

continuing down to the open gate and seeing the sign posted there, he knew.

THIS SITE HAS BEEN CLOSED BY

THE CHARLOTTE COUNTY DEPT

OF BUILDING AND PLANNING

THE CHARLOTTE COUNTY BUREAU OF TAXATION

THE FLORIDA BUREAU OF TAXATION

UNITED STATES INTERNAL REVENUE

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL 941-555-1800

Below this, some exuberant wit had spray-painted: DIAL EXTENSION 69 AND ASK

FOR THE CUNT-LICKER GENERAL!

The tar ended and the potholes began after the only three buildings that looked

completed: two shops on one side of the street and a model home on the other. The

model home was a faux Cape Cod that made Curtis’s blood run cold. He didn’t trust

the Vespa on the unpaved sur face, so he turned in beside a payloader that looked as if it had been parked there for a century or more—grass was growing in the dirt at the

bottom of its partially raised scoop—put down the stand, and turned off the engine.

Silence poured in to fill the socket which had been occupied by the Vespa’s fat purr.

Then a crow cawed. It was answered by another. Curtis looked up and saw a trio of

them poised on a scaffolding that enshrouded a partially finished brick building.

Maybe it had been intended as a bank. Now it’s Grunwald’s tombstone, he thought, but the idea didn’t even bring a smile to his lips. He felt like gagging himself again, and might even have done it, but farther down the deserted dirt street—at the far end, in fact—he saw a man standing beside a white sedan with a green palm tree on it.

Above the palm tree: GRUNWALD. Below it: CONTRACTORS & BUILDERS. The

man was waving to him. Grunwald was for some reason driving a company car today

instead of his Porsche. Curtis supposed it wasn’t impossible that Grunwald had sold

the Porsche. It wasn’t impossible to think the IRS had seized it, and might even seize Grunwald’s Turtle Island property. Then the Vinton Lot would be the least of his

worries.

I just hope they leave him enough to pay for my dog, Curtis thought. He waved back to Grunwald, flicked the red alarm switch below the ignition after removing the key

(these things were only reflex; he did not think the Vespa was in any danger of being

stolen, not out here, but he had been taught to take care of his things), and put the key in his pocket with his cell phone. Then he started down the dirt street—a Main Street

that never was, and, it now seemed certain, never would be—to meet his neighbor and

settle the trouble between them once and for all, if that were possible. He was careful to avoid the puddles left from the previous night’s shower.

“Yo, neighbor!” Grunwald said as Curtis approached. He was wearing khakis and a

T-shirt with his company’s palm-tree logo on it. The shirt bagged on him. Except for

hectic blotches of red high on his cheekbones and dark—almost black—circles under

his eyes, his face was pale. And although he sounded cheerful, he looked sicker than

ever. Whatever they tried to cut out of him, Curtis thought, they failed. Grunwald had one hand behind him. Curtis assumed it was in his back pocket. This turned out not to

be true.

A little farther down the rutted and puddled dirt road was a trailer up on blocks. The on-site office, Curtis supposed. There was a notice encased in a protective plastic

sleeve, hanging from a little plastic suction cup. There was a lot printed on it, but all Curtis could read (all he needed to read) were the words at the top: NO ENTRY.

Yes, The Motherfucker had fallen on hard times. Hard cheese on Tony, as Evelyn

Waugh might have said.

“Grunwald?” It was enough to start with; considering what had happened to Betsy, it

was all The Motherfucker deserved. Curtis stopped about ten feet from him, his legs

slightly spread to avoid a puddle. Grunwald’s legs were spread, too. It occurred to

Curtis that this was a classic pose: gunfighters about to do their deal on the only street of a ghost town.

“Yo, neighbor!” Grunwald repeated, and this time he actually laughed. There was

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