Stephen King – Stationary Bike

muzzle on his paws, and Pepe did not raise his head but rolled his eyes up to look at

him as he passed, revealing a gruesome, blood-threaded crescent of white, and that

was when Sifkitz began to weep in the dream, understanding that all was lost.

Now he was in the garage. He could smell oil. He could smell old sweet grass. The

LawnBoy stood in the corner like a suburban god. He could see the vise clamped to

the work-table, old and dark and flecked with tiny splinters of wood. Next, a closet.

His girls’ ice-skates were piled on the floor, their laces as white as vanilla ice cream.

His tools hung from pegs on the walls, arranged neatly, mostly yard-tools, a bear for

working in his yard was

(Carlos. I am Carlos.)

On the top shelf, far out of the girls’ reach, was a .410 shotgun, not used for years,

nearly forgotten, and a box of shells so dark you could barely read the word

Winchester on the side, only you could read it, just enough, and that was when Sifkitz came to understand that he was being carried along in the brain of a potential suicide.

He strug gled furiously to either stop Carlos or escape him and could do neither, even

though he sensed his bed so near, just on the other side of the gauze that wrapped him

from head to foot.

Now he was at the vise again, and the .410 was clamped in the vise, and the box of

shells was on the work-table beside the vise, and here was a hacksaw, he was

hacksawing off the barrel of the shotgun because that would make it easier to do what

he had to do, and when he opened the box of shells there were two dozen of them, fat

green buggers with brass bottoms, and the sound the gun made when Carlos snapped

it closed wasn’t cling! but CLACK! and the taste in his mouth was oily and dusty,

oily on his tongue and dusty on the insides of his cheeks and his teeth, and his back

hurt, it hurt LAMF, that was how they had tagged abandoned buildings (and

sometimes ones that weren’t abandoned) when he was a teenager and running with

the Deacons in Po’-town, stood for LIKE A MOTHERFUCKER, and that was how

his back hurt, but now that he was laid off the benefits were gone, Jimmy Berkowitz

could no longer afford the bennies and so Carlos Martinez could no longer afford the

drugs that made the pain a little less, could no longer afford the chiropractor that made

the pain a little less, and the house-payments—ay, caramba, they used to say, joking,

but he sure wasn’t joking now, ay, caramba they were going to lose the house, less

than five years from the finish-line but they were going to lose it, si-si, señor, and it

was all that fuck Sifkitz’s fault, him with his fucking road-maintenance hobby, and

the curve of the trigger underneath his finger was like a crescent, like the unspeakable

crescent of his dog’s peering eye.

That was when Sifkitz woke up, sobbing and shaking, legs still in bed, head out and

almost touching the floor, hair hanging. He crawled all the way out of the bedroom

and started crawling across the main room to the easel under the skylight. Halfway

there he found himself able to walk.

The picture of the empty road was still on the easel, the better and more complete

version of the one downstairs on the alcove wall. He flung it away without a second

look and set up a piece of two-foot-by-two pressboard in its place. He seized the

nearest implement which would make a mark (this happened to be a UniBall Vision

Elite pen) and began to draw. He drew for hours. At one point (he remembered this

only vaguely) he needed to piss and could feel it running hot down his leg. The tears

didn’t stop until the picture was finished. Then, thankfully dry-eyed at last, he stood

back and looked at what he had done.

It was Carlos’s garage on an October afternoon. The dog, Pepe, stood in front of it

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19

Leave a Reply 0

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