Stephen King – Stationary Bike

done he’d borrow the adjustable wrench from the super’s toolbox.

He dropped to one knee, slipped the tip of the borrowed tool into the slot of the first

screw, and hesitated. He wondered if his friend had smoked one more rock before

turning the rest of them down the toilet, just one more rock for old times’ sake. He bet

the guy had. Being a little stoned had probably stilled the cravings, made the disposal

job a little easier. And if he had one more ride, then knelt here to take off the pedals

with the endorphins flowing, wouldn’t he feel a little less depressed about it? A little less likely to imagine Berkowitz, Freddy, and Whelan retiring to the nearest roadside

bar, where they would buy first one pitcher of Rolling Rock and then another, toasting

each other and Carlos’s memory, congratulating each other on how they had beaten

the bastard?

“You’re crazy,” he murmured to himself, and slipped the tip of the driver back into

the notch of the screw. “Do it and be done.”

He actually turned the screwdriver once (and it was easy; whoever had put this

together in the back room of The Fitness Boys obviously hadn’t had his heart in it),

but when he did, the oatmeal-raisin cookies shifted a little in his pocket and he

thought how good they always tasted when you were riding along. You just took your

right hand off the handlebar, dipped it into your pocket, had a couple of bites, then

chased it with a swallow of iced tea. It was the perfect combination. It just felt so

good to be speeding along, having a little picnic as you went, and those sons of

bitches wanted to take it away from him.

A dozen turns of the screw, maybe even less, and the pedal would drop off onto the

concrete floor—clunk. Then he could move on to the other one, and then he could

move on with his life.

This is not fair, he thought.

One more ride, just for old times’ sake, he thought.

And, swinging his leg over the fork and settling his ass (firmer and harder by far than

it had been on the day of the red cholesterol number) onto the seat, he thought: This is

the way stories like this always go, isn’t it? The way they always end, with the poor

schmuck saying this is the last time, I’ll never do this again.

Absolutely true, he thought, but I’ll bet in real life, people get away with it. I bet they

get away with it all the time.

Part of him was murmuring that real life had never been like this, what he was doing

(and what he was experiencing) bore absolutely no resemblance whatever to real life

as he understood it. He pushed the voice away, closed his ears to it.

It was a beautiful evening for a ride in the woods.

VI. Not Quite the Ending Everyone Expected

And still, he got one more chance.

That was the night he heard the revving engine behind him clearly for the first time,

and just before the alarm clock went off, the Raleigh he was riding suddenly grew an

elongated shadow on the road ahead of him—the sort of shadow that could only have

been created by headlights.

Then the alarm did go off, not a bray but a distant purring sound that was almost

melodic.

The truck was closing in. He didn’t need to turn his head to see it (nor does one ever

want to turn and see the frightful fiend that close behind him treads, Sifkitz supposed

later that night, lying awake in his bed and still wrapped in the cold-yet-hot sensation

of disaster avoided by mere inches or seconds). He could see the shadow, growing

longer and darker.

Hurry up, please, gentlemen, it’s time, he thought, and squeezed his eyes closed. He

could still hear the alarm, but it was still no more than that almost soothing purr, it

was certainly no louder; what was louder was the engine, the one inside Freddy’s

truck. It was almost on him, and suppose they didn’t want to waste so much as a New York minute in conversation? Suppose the one currently behind the wheel just

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