Stephen King – Willa

for the shuttle to Crowheart Springs, Palmer frowned. “Not a good idea, my young

friend.”

Something—it might have been a large dog but probably wasn’t—lifted a howl from

the other side of the railway station, where the sage and broom grew almost up to the

tracks. A second voice joined it, creating harmony. They trailed off together.

“See what I mean, jellybean?” And Palmer smiled as if he’d conjured those howls just

to prove his point.

David turned, his light jacket rippling around him in the keen breeze, and started

down the steps. He went fast, before he could change his mind, and only the first step

was really hard. After that he just thought about Willa.

“David,” Palmer said, not joshing now, not joking around. “Don’t.”

“Why not? She did. Besides, the wolves are over there.” He jerked a thumb back over

his shoulder. “If that’s what they are.”

“Course that’s what they are. And no, they probably won’t come at you—I doubt if

they’re specially hungry this time of year. But there’s no need for both of you to

spend another God-knows-how-long in the middle of nowhere just because she got to

missing the bright lights.”

“You don’t seem to understand—she’s my girl.”

“I’m going to tell you a hard truth, my friend: If she really considered herself your girl, she wouldn’t have done what she did. You think?”

At first David said nothing, because he wasn’t sure what he thought. Possibly because

he often didn’t see what was right in front of his eyes. Willa had said so. Finally he

turned back to look at Phil Palmer leaning in the doorway above him. “I think you

don’t leave your fiancée stranded in the middle of nowhere. That’s what I think.”

Palmer sighed. “I almost hope one of those trash-pine lobos does decide to put the bite on your city ass. It might smarten you up. Little Willa Stuart cares for nobody but

herself, and everyone sees it but you.”

“If I pass a Nite Owl store or a 7-Eleven, you want me to pick you up a pack of

cigarettes?”

“Why the fuck not?” Palmer said. Then, just as David was walking across NO

PARKING TAXI ZONE painted on the empty curbless street: “David!”

David turned back.

“The shuttle won’t be back until tomorrow, and it’s three miles to town. Says so, right on the back wall of the information booth. That’s six miles, round-trip. On foot. Take

you two hours, and that’s not counting the time it might take you to track her down.”

David raised his hand to indicate he heard, but kept going. The wind was off the

mountains, and cold, but he liked the way it rippled his clothes and combed back his

hair. At first he watched for wolves, scanning one side of the road and then the other, but when he saw none, his thoughts returned to Willa. And really, his mind had been

fixed on little else since the second or third time he had been with her.

She’d gotten to missing the bright lights; Palmer was almost certainly right about that much, but David didn’t believe she cared for nobody but herself. The truth was she’d

just gotten tired of waiting around with a bunch of sad old sacks moaning about how

they were going to be late for this, that, and the other. The town over yonder probably didn’t amount to much, but in her mind it must have held some possibility for fun, and

that had outweighed the possibility of Amtrak sending a special to pick them up while

she was gone.

And where, exactly, would she have gone looking for fun?

He was sure there were no what you’d call nightclubs in Crowheart Springs, where

the passenger station was just a long green shed with WYOMING and “THE

EQUALITY STATE” painted on the side in red, white, and blue. No nightclubs, no

discos, but there were undoubtedly bars, and he thought she’d settle for one of those.

If she couldn’t go clubbin’, she’d go jukin’.

Night came on and the stars unrolled across the sky from east to west like a rug with

spangles in it. A half-moon rose between two peaks and sat there, casting a sickroom

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