From a Buick 8 by Stephen King

‘We have to take care of this,’ the Sarge said. ‘You boys know that.’

They knew it. And still none of them moved.

What if some of them are still alive? That was what Sandy was thinking. It was a ridiculous idea, the bat-thing had been in a plastic evidence bag which had been in a sealed Eskimo cooler for six weeks or more, but knowing such an idea was ridiculous wasn’t enough. Logic had lost its power, at least for awhile. When you were dealing with a one-eyed thing that had its brain (its green brain) in its chest, the very idea of logic seemed laughable. Sandy could all too easily imagine those black pellets in their gauzy overwrappings starting to pulse and move about like lethargic jumping-beans on the little desk as the fierce glow from the Tensor lamps warmed them back to vitality. Sure, that was easy to imagine. And sounds coming from them. High little mewling noises. The sounds of baby birds or baby rats working to be born. But he had been the first one out, goddammit. He could be the first one back in, at least he could do that much.

‘Come on,’ Sandy said, and stepped over the threshold. ‘Let’s get this done. Then I’m going to spend the rest of the night in the shower.’

‘You’ll have to wait in line,’ Tony said.

So they cleaned the mess up as they had cleaned up so many on the highway. It took about an hour, all told, and although getting started was hard, they were almost themselves by the rime the job was finished. The biggest help in getting back on an even keel was the fan. With the Tensor lamps turned off, they could run it with no worries about popping a breaker. Curt never said another word about keeping the supply room’s door shut, either. Sandy guessed he’d figured any poor quarantine they might have managed had been breached to a faretheewell.

The fan couldn’t clear that sallow stench of cabbage and bitter peppermint entirely, but it drove enough of it out into the hall so that their stomachs settled. Tony checked the videocam and said it appeared to be fine.

‘I remember when Japanese stuff used to break,’ he said. ‘Curt, do you want to look at anything under the microscope? We can hang in a little longer if you do. Right, Sandy?’

Although not enthusiastic, Sandy nodded his head. He was still deeply ashamed of the way he had puked and run; felt he hadn’t made up for that yet, not quite.

‘No,’ Curt said. He sounded tired and dispirited. ‘The damn Gummi Bears that fell out of it were its litter. The black stuff was probably its blood. As for the rest? I wouldn’t know what I was seeing.’

Not just dispirit but something close to despair, although neither Tony nor Sandy would realize that until later. It came to Sandy on one of those sleepless nights he had just bought and paid for. Lying in the bedroom of his small home in East Statler Heights with his hands behind his head and the lamp on the nighttable burning and the radio on low, sleep a thousand

miles away. Realizing what Curt had come face to face with for the first time since the Buick showed up, and maybe for the first time in his life: that he was almost certainly never going to know what he wanted to know. What he’d told himself he needed to know. His ambition had been to discover and uncover, but so what? Spit on that, Jack, as they used to say when they were kids. All over the United States there were scrambling shirttail grammar school kids who’d tell you their ambition was to play in the NBA. Their futures in almost all cases would turn out to be more mundane. There comes a time when most folks see the big picture and realize they’re puckered up not to kiss smiling fate on the mouth because life just slipped them a pill, and it tastes bitter. Wasn’t that where Curds Wilcox was now? Sandy thought yeah. His interest in the Buick was likely to continue, but with each passing year that interest would look more and more like what it really was — ordinary police work. Stakeout and surveillance, writing reports (in journals his wife would later burn), cleaning up the occasional mess when the Buick gave birth to another monstrosity which would struggle briefly and then die.

Oh, and living through the occasional sleepless night. But they came with the territory, didn’t they?

Curt and Tony unpinned the monstrosity from the corkboard. They put it back in the evidence bag. All but two of the black pellets followed, swept into the evidence bag with a fingerprint brush. This time Curt made sure the seal on the bag was tight all the way across the top. ‘Is Arky still around?’ he asked.

Tony said, ‘No. He wanted to stay, but I sent him home.’

‘Then would one of you go upstairs and ask Orv or Buck to start a fire in the incinerator out back? Also, someone needs to put a pot of water on the stove. A big one.’

‘I’ll do it,’ Sandy said, and after ejecting the tape from Huddie’s videocam, he did.

While he was gone, Curt took swabs of the viscid black stuff which had come out of the thing’s gut and uterus; he also swabbed the thinner white fluid from the chest organ. He covered each swab with Saran Wrap and put them into another evidence bag. The two remaining unborn creatures with their tiny wings wrapped around them (and their unsettling one-eyed stares) went into a third evidence bag. Curt worked competently, but with no zest, much as he would have worked a cold crime-scene.

The specimens and the bat-thing’s flayed body eventually wound up in the battered green cabinet, which George Morgan took to calling ‘the Troop D sideshow’. Tony allowed two of the Troopers from upstairs to come clown when the pot of water on the stove had reached a boil. The five men donned heavy rubber kitchen gloves and scrubbed down everything they could reach. The unwanted organic leftovers went into a plastic bag, along with the scrub-rags, surgical gloves, dental masks, and shirts. The bag went into the incinerator and the smoke went up to the sky, God the Father, ever and ever, amen.

Sandy, Curtis, and Tony took showers — long enough and hot enough to exhaust the tank downstairs not once but twice. After that, rosy-cheeked and freshly combed, they ended up on the smokers’ bench.

‘I’m so clean I almost squeak,’ Sandy said.

‘Squeak this,’ Curt replied, but amiably enough.

They sat and just looked at the shed for awhile, not talking.

‘A lot of that shit got on us,’ Tony said at last. ‘Lot of that shit.’ Overhead, a three-quarter moon hung in the sky like a polished rock. Sandy could feel a tremble in the air. He thought maybe it was the seasons getting ready to change. ‘If we get sick — ‘

‘I think if we were going to get sick, we’d be sick already,’ Curt said. ‘We were lucky.

Damn lucky. Did you boys get a good look at your peepers in the bathroom mirror?’

They had, of course. Their eyes were red-rimmed and bloodshot, the eyes of men who have spent a long day fighting a brushfire.

‘I think that’ll go away,’ Curt said, ‘but I believe wearing those masks was probably a damn good idea, after all. They’re no protection against germs, but at least none of that black crap got in our mouths. I think the results of something like that might have been quite nasty.’

He was right.

NOW:

Sandy

The sandwiches were gone. So was the iced tea. I told Arky to get ten bucks out of the contingency fund (which was kept in ajar in the upstairs closet) and go down to Finn’s Cash and Carry. I thought two sixpacks of Coke and one of root beer would probably carry us through to the end.

‘I do dat, I miss d’part about d’fish,’ Arky said.

‘Arky, you know the part about the fish. You know all the parts of this story. Go on and get us some cold drinks. Please.’

He went, firing up his old truck and driving out of the parking lot too fast. A man driving that way was apt to get a ticket.

‘Go on,’ Ned said. ‘What happened next?’

‘Well,’ I said, ‘let’s see. The old Sarge became a grandfather, that ‘was one thing. It probably happened a lot sooner than he wanted it to, baby born out of wedlock, big hooraw in the family, but everyone eventually calmed down and that girl has gone on to Smith, which is not a bad place for a young lady to get her diploma, or so I understand. George Morgan’s boy hit a home run in tee-ball and George went around just about busting his buttons, he was so proud. This was I think two years before he killed the woman in the road and then killed himself. Orvie Garrett’s wife got blood poisoning in her foot and lost a couple of toes. Shirley Pasternak came to work with us in 1984 — ‘

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