Stephen King – Rest Stop

He started to scramble—

A voice above him said, “Don’t roll over, Lee. I’ve got a tire iron in my hand. Stay on

your stomach or I’ll beat your head in.”

Lee lay where he was with his hands out in front of him, almost touching.

“Come out of there, Ellen,” said the man who had hit him. “We have no time to fool

around. Come out right now.”

There was a pause. Then the hoor’s voice, trembling and thick: “Did you hurt him?

Don’t you hurt him!”

“He’s okay, but if you don’t come out right now, I’m going to hurt him bad. I’ll have

to.” A pause, then: “And it’ll be your fault.”

Meanwhile, the car horn, beating monotonously into the night— Bamp! Bamp! Bamp!

Bamp!

Lee started to turn his head on the pavement. It hurt. What had the fucker hit him with?

Had he said a tire iron? He couldn’t remember.

The boot slammed into his ass again. Lee yelled and turned his face back to the

pavement.

“Come out, lady, or I’m going to open up his head! I have no choice here!”

When she spoke again, she was closer. Her voice was unsteady, but now tending

toward outrage: “Why did you do that? You didn’t have to do that!”

“I called the police on my cell,” the man standing above him said. “There was a

trooper at mile 140. So we’ve got ten minutes, maybe a little less. Mr. Lee-Lee, do

you have the car keys or does she?”

Lee had to think about it.

“She does,” he said at last. “She said I was too drunk to drive.”

“All right. Ellen, you go down there and get in that PT Cruiser, and you drive away.

You keep going until you get to Lake City, and if you’ve got the brains God gave a

duck, you won’t turn around there, either.”

“I ain’t leaving him with you!” She sounded very angry now. “Not when you got that

thing!”

“Yes, you are. You do it right now or I’ll fuck him up royally.”

“You bully!”

The man laughed, and the sound frightened Lee more than the fellow’s speaking voice.

“I’ll count to thirty. If you’re not driving southbound out of the rest area by then, I’ll take his head right off his shoulders. I’ll drive it like a golf ball.”

“You can’t—”

“Do it, Ellie. Do it, honey.”

“You heard him,” the man said. “Your big old teddy bear wants you to go. If you

want to let him finish beating the shit out of you tomorrow night—and the baby—

that’s fine with me. I won’t be around tomorrow night. But right now I’m done

fucking with you; so you put your dumb ass in gear.”

This was a command she understood, delivered in language familiar to her, and Lee

saw her bare legs and sandals moving past his lowered line of vision. The man who’d

sandbagged him started counting loudly: “One, two, three, four…”

“Hurry the hell up!” Lee shouted, and the boot was on his ass, but more gently now, rocking him rather than whacking him. But it still hurt. Meanwhile, Bamp! Bamp!

Bamp! into the night. “Get your ass in gear!”

At that her sandals began to run. Her shadow ran beside them. The man had reached

twenty when the PT Cruiser’s little sewing-machine engine started up, had reached

thirty when Lee saw its taillights backing into the parking area. Lee waited for the

man to start whacking and was relieved when he didn’t.

Then the PT Cruiser started down the exit lane and the engine sound began to fade,

and then the man standing over him spoke with a kind of perplexity.

“Now,” the man who’d sandbagged him said, “what am I going to do with you?”

“Don’t hurt me,” Lee said. “Don’t hurt me, mister.”

Once the PT Cruiser’s taillights were out of sight, Hardin shifted the tire iron from

one hand to the other. His palms were sweaty and he almost dropped it. That would

have been bad. The tire iron would have clanged loudly on the concrete if he’d

dropped it, and Lee would have been up in a flash. He wasn’t as big as Dykstra had

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Leave a Reply 0

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