Bag of Bones by Stephen King

‘Is that how Lance played?

She thought about it carefully. ‘He played hard, but he wasn’t crazed. He was there just for the fun of it. We all were. We women — shit, really just us girls, Barney Therriault’s wife, Cindy, was only sixteen — we’d stand behind the backstop on the first-base side, smoking cigarettes or waving punks to keep the bugs away, cheering our guys when they did something good, laughing when they did something stupid. We’d swap sodas or share a can of beer. I’d admire Helen Geary’s twins and she’d kiss Ki under the chin until Ki giggled. Sometimes we’d go down to the Village Cafe afterward and Buddy’d make us pizzas, losers pay. All friends again, you know, a ter the game.

We’d sit there laughing and yelling and blowing straw-wrappers around, some of the guys half-loaded but nobody mean. In those days they got all the mean out on the ballfield. And you know what? None of them come to see me. Not Helen Geary, who was my best friend. Not Richie

Lattimore, who was Lance’s best friend — the two of them would talk about rocks and birds and the kinds of trees there were across the lake for hours on end. They came to the uneral, and for a little while after, and then . . . you know what it was like? When I was a kid, our well dried up. For awhile you’d get a trickle when you turned on the tap, but then there was just air. Just air.’ The cynicism was gone and there was only hurt in her voice. ‘I saw Helen at Christmas, and we promised to get together for the twins’ birthday, but we never did. I think she’s scared to come near me.’

‘Because of the old man?’

‘Who else? But that’s okay, life goes on.’ She sat up, drank the rest of her Kool-Aid, and set the glass aside. ‘What about you, Mike? Did you come back to write a book? Are you going to name the TR?’ This was a local bon mot that I remembered with an almost painful twinge of nostalgia.

Locals with great plans were said to be bent on naming the TR.

‘No,’ I said, and then astonished myself by saying: ‘I don’t do that anymore. I think I expected her to leap to her feet, overturning her chair and uttering a sharp cry of horrified denial. All of which says a good deal about me, I suppose, and none of it flattering.

‘You’ve retired?’ she asked, sounding calm and remarkably unhorrified. ‘Or is it writer’s block?’

‘Well, it’s certainly not chosen retirement.’ I realized the conversation had taken a rather amusing turn. I’d come primarily to sell her on John Storrow — to shove John Storrow down her throat, if that was what it took — and instead I was for the first time discussing my inability to work. For the first time with anyone.

‘So it’s a block.’

‘I used to think so, but now I’m not so sure. I think novelists may come equipped with a certain number of stories to tell — they’re built into the software. And when they’re gone, they’re gone.’

‘I doubt that,’ she said. ‘Maybe you’ll write now that you’re down here. Maybe that’s part of the reason you came back.’

‘Maybe you’re right.’

‘Are you scared?’

‘Sometimes. Mostly about what I’ll do for the rest of my life. I’m no good at boats in bottles, and my wife was the one with the green thumb.’

‘I’m scared, too,’ she said. ‘Scared a lot. All the time now, it seems like.’

‘That he’ll win his custody case? Mattie, that’s what I — ‘

‘The custody case is only part of it,’ she said. ‘I’m scared just to be here, on the TR. It started early this summer, long after I knew Devore meant to get Ki away from me if he could. And it’s getting worse. In a way it’s like watching thunderheads gather over New Hampshire and then come piling across the lake. I can’t put it any better than that, except . . . ‘ She shifted, crossing her legs and then bending forward to pull the skirt of her dress against the line of her shin, as if she were cold. ‘Except that I’ve woken up several times lately, sure that I wasn’t in the bedroom alone. Once when I was sure I wasn’t in the bed alone. Sometimes it’s just a feeling — like a headache, only in your nerves — and sometimes I think I can hear whispering, or crying. I made a cake one night —

about two weeks ago, this was — and forgot to put the flour away. The next morning the cannister was overturned, and the flour was spilled on the counter. Someone had written ‘hello’ in it. I thought at first it was Ki, but she said she didn’t do it. Besides, it wasn’t her printing, hers is all straggly. I don’t know if she could even write hello. Hi, maybe, but . . . Mike, you don’t think he could be sending someone around to try and freak me out, do you? I mean that’s just stupid, right?’

‘I don’t know,’ I said. I thought of something thumping the insulation in the dark as I stood on the stairs. I thought of hello printed with magnets on my refrigerator door, and a child sobbing in the

dark. My skin felt more than cold; it felt numb. A headache in the nerves, that was good, that was exactly how you felt when something reached around the wall of the real world and touched you on the nape of the neck.

‘Maybe it’s ghosts,’ she said, and smiled in an uncertain way that was more frightened than amused.

I opened my mouth to tell her about what had been happening at Sara Laughs, then closed it again. There was a clear choice to be made here: either we could be sidetracked into a discussion of the paranormal, or we could come back to the visible world. The one where Max Devore was trying to steal himself a kid.

‘Yeah,’ I said. ‘The spirits are about to speak.’

‘I wish I could see your face better. There was something on it just then. What?’

‘I don’t know,’ I said. ‘But right now I think we’d better talk about Kyra. Okay?’

‘Okay.’ In the faint glow of the hibachi I could see her settling herself in her chair, as if to take a blow.

‘I’ve been subpoenaed to give a deposition in Castle Rock on Friday. Before Elmer Durgin, who is Kyra’s guardian ad litem — ‘

‘That pompous little toad isn’t Ki’s anything!’ she burst out. ‘He’s in my father-in-law’s hip pocket, just like Dickie Osgood, old Max’s pet real-estate guy! Dickie and Elmer Durgin drink together down at The Mellow Tiger, or at least they did until this business really got going. Then someone probably told them it would look bad, and they stopped.’

‘The papers were served by a deputy named George Footman.’

‘Just one more of the usual suspects,’ Mattie said in a thin voice. ‘Dickie Osgood’s a snake, but George Footman’s a junkyard dog. He’s been suspended off the cops twice. Once more and he can work for Max Devore full-time.’

‘Well, he scared me. I tried not to show it, but he did. And people who scare me make me angry.

I called my agent in New York and then hired a lawyer. One who makes a specialty of child-custody cases.’

I tried to see how she was taking this and couldn’t, although we were sitting fairly close together.

But she still had that set look, like a woman who expects to take some hard blows. Or perhaps for Mattie the blows had already started to fall. Slowly, not allowing myself to rush, I went through my conversation with John Storrow. I emphasized what Storrow had said about sexual equality — that it was apt to be a negative force in her case, making it easier for Judge Rancourt to take Kyra away.

I also came down hard on the fact that Devore could have all the lawyers he wanted — not to mention sympathetic witnesses, with Richard Osgood running around the TR and spreading Devore’s dough — but that the court wasn’t obligated to treat her to so much as an ice cream cone. I finished by telling her that John wanted to talk to one of us tomorrow at eleven, and that it should be her. Then I waited. The silence spun out, broken only by crickets and the faint revving of some kid’s unmuffled truck. Up Route 68, the white fluorescents went out as the Lakeview Market finished another day of summer trade. I didn’t like Mattie’s quiet; it seemed like the prelude to an explosion. A Yankee explosion. I held my peace and waited for her to ask me what gave me the right to meddle in her business.

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133

Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *