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Under the Dome: A Novel

Page 66

by Stephen King


  “Glinda,” the girl said faintly. “Although I guess I won’t be going to the party, after all. It’s in Motton.”

  “I’m coming as Jesus,” Chef said. He followed Ginny, a dirty ghost in decaying Converse Hi-Tops. Then he turned back. He was smiling. His eyes were empty. “And am I pissed.”

  20

  Chef Bushey came out of the hospital ten minutes later bearing Sammy’s sheet-wrapped body in his arms. One bare foot, the toenails painted with chipped pink polish, nodded and dipped. Ginny held the door for him. She didn’t look to see who was behind the wheel of the car idling in the turnaround, and for this Andy was vaguely grateful. He waited until she’d gone back inside, then got out and opened one of the back doors for Chef, who handled his burden easily for a man who now looked like no more than skin wrapped on an armature of bone. Perhaps, Andy thought, meth conveys strength, too. If so, his own was flagging. The depression was creeping back in. The weariness, too.

  “All right,” Chef said. “Drive. But pass me that, first.”

  He had given Andy the garage door opener for safekeeping. Andy handed it over. “To the funeral parlor?”

  Chef looked at him as if he were mad. “Back out to the radio station. That’s where Christ will come first when He comes back.”

  “On Halloween.”

  “That’s right,” Chef said. “Or maybe sooner. In the meantime, will you help me bury this child of God?”

  “Of course,” Andy said. Then, timidly: “Maybe we could smoke a little more first.”

  Chef laughed and clapped Andy on the shoulder. “Like it, don’t you? I knew you would.”

  “A medicine for melancholy,” Andy said.

  “True-dat, brother. True-dat.”

  21

  Barbie on the bunk, waiting for dawn and whatever came next. He had trained himself during his time in Iraq not to worry about what came next, and although this was an imperfect skill at best, he had mastered it to some degree. In the end, there were only two rules for living with fear (he had come to believe conquering fear was a myth), and he repeated them to himself now as he lay waiting.

  I must accept those things over which I have no control.

  I must turn my adversities into advantages.

  The second rule meant carefully husbanding any resources and planning with those in mind.

  He had one resource tucked into the mattress: his Swiss Army knife. It was a small one, only two blades, but even the short one would be capable of cutting a man’s throat. He was incredibly lucky to have it, and he knew it.

  Whatever intake routines Howard Perkins might have insisted upon had fallen apart since his death and the ascension of Peter Randolph. The shocks the town had endured over the last four days would have knocked any police department off its pins, Barbie supposed, but there was more to it than that. What it came down to was Randolph was both stupid and sloppy, and in any bureaucracy the rank-and-file tended to take their cues from the man at the top.

  They had fingerprinted him and photographed him, but it had been five full hours before Henry Morrison, looking tired and disgusted, came downstairs and stopped six feet from Barbie’s cell. Well out of grabbing distance.

  “Forget something, did you?” Barbie asked. “Dump out your pockets and shove everything into the corridor,” Henry said. “Then take off your pants and put em through the bars.”

  “If I do that, can I get something to drink I don’t have to slurp out of the toiletbowl?”

  “What are you talking about? Junior brought you water. I saw him.”

  “He poured salt in it.”

  “Right. Absolutely.” But Henry had looked a little unsure. Maybe there was a thinking human being still in there somewhere. “Do what I tell you, Barbie. Barbara, I mean.”

  Barbie emptied his pockets: wallet, keys, coins, a little fold of bills, the St. Christopher’s medal he carried as a good luck charm. By then the Swiss Army knife was long gone into the mattress. “You can still call me Barbie when you put a rope around my neck and hang me, if you want. Is that what Rennie’s got in mind? Hanging? Or a firing squad?”

  “Just shut up and shove your pants through the bars. Shirt, too.” He sounded like a total smalltown hardass, but Barbie thought he looked more unsure than ever. That was good. That was a start.

  Two of the new kiddie-cops had come downstairs. One held a can of Mace; the other a Taser. “Need any help, Officer Morrison?” one asked.

  “No, but you can stand right there at the foot of the stairs and keep an eye out until I’m done here,” Henry had said.

  “I didn’t kill anybody.” Barbie spoke quietly, but with all the honest sincerity he could muster. “And I think you know it.”

  “What I know is that you better shut up, unless you want a Taser enema.”

  Henry had rummaged through his clothes, but didn’t ask Barbie to strip down to his underpants and spread his cheeks. A late search and piss-poor, but Barbie gave him some points for remembering to do one at all—no one else had.

  When Henry had finished, he kicked the bluejeans, pockets now empty and belt confiscated, back through the bars.

  “May I have my medallion?”

  “No.”

  “Henry, think about this. Why would I—”

  “Shut up.”

  Henry pushed past the two kiddie-cops with his head down and Barbie’s personal effects in his hands. The kiddie-cops followed, one pausing long enough to grin at Barbie and saw a finger across his neck.

  Since then he’d been alone, with nothing to do but lie on the bunk and look up at the little slit of a window (opaque pebbled glass reinforced with wire), waiting for the dawn and wondering if they would actually try to waterboard him or if Searles had just been gassing out his ass. If they took a shot at it and turned out to be as bad at boarding as they had been at prisoner intake, there was a good chance they’d drown him.

  He also wondered if someone might come down before dawn. Someone with a key. Someone who might stand a little too close to the door. With the knife, escape was not completely out of the question, but once dawn came, it probably would be. Maybe he should have tried for Junior when Junior passed the glass of salt water through the bars … only Junior had been very eager to use his sidearm. It would have been a long chance, and Barbie wasn’t that desperate. At least not yet.

  Besides … where would I go?

  Even if he escaped and disappeared, he could be letting his friends in for a world of hurt. After strenuous “questioning” by cops like Melvin and Junior, they might consider the Dome the least of their problems. Big Jim was in the saddle now, and once guys like him were in it, they tended to ride hard. Sometimes until the horse collapsed beneath them.

  He fell into a thin and troubled sleep. He dreamed of the blonde in the old Ford pickemup. He dreamed that she stopped for him and they got out of Chester’s Mill just in time. She was unbuttoning her blouse to display the cups of a lacy lavender bra when a voice said: “Hey there, fuckstick. Wakey-wakey.”

  22

  Jackie Wettington spent the night at the Everett house, and although the kids were quiet and the guest-room bed was comfortable, she lay awake. By four o’clock that morning, she had decided what needed to be done. She understood the risks; she also understood that she couldn’t rest with Barbie in a cell under the Police Department. If she herself had been capable of stepping up and organizing some sort of resistance—or just a serious investigation of the murders—she thought she would have started already. She knew herself too well, however, to even entertain the thought. She’d been good enough at what she did in Guam and Germany—rousting drunk troops out of bars, chasing AWOLs, and cleaning up after car crashes on the base was what it mostly came down to—but what was happening in Chester’s Mill was far beyond a master sergeant’s pay grade. Or the only full-time female street officer working with a bunch of small-town men who called her Officer Bazooms behind her back. They thought she didn’t know this, but she did. And right now a lit
tle junior high school–level sexism was the least of her worries. This had to end, and Dale Barbara was the man the President of the United States had picked to end it. Even the pleasure of the Commander in Chief wasn’t the most important part. The first rule was you didn’t leave your guys behind. That was sacred, the Fabled Automatic.

  It had to begin with letting Barbie know he wasn’t alone. Then he could plan his own actions accordingly.

  When Linda came downstairs in her nightgown at five o’clock, first light had begun to seep in through the windows, revealing trees and bushes that were perfectly still. Not a breath of breeze was stirring.

  “I need a Tupperware,” Jackie said. “A bowl. It should be small, and it needs to be opaque. Do you have anything like that?”

  “Sure, but why?”

  “Because we’re going to take Dale Barbara his breakfast,” Jackie said. “Cereal. And we’re going to put a note in the bottom of it.”

  “What are you talking about? Jackie, I can’t do that. I’ve got kids.”

  “I know. But I can’t do it alone, because they won’t let me go down there on my own. Maybe if I was a man, but not equipped with these.” She indicated her breasts. “I need you.”

  “What kind of note?”

  “I’m going to break him out tomorrow night,” Jackie said, more calmly than she felt. “During the big town meeting. I won’t need you for that part—”

  “You won’t get me for that part!” Linda was clutching the neck of her nightgown.

  “Keep your voice down. I’m thinking maybe Romeo Burpee—assuming I can convince him Barbie didn’t kill Brenda. We’ll wear balaclavas or something, so we can’t be identified. No one will be surprised; everyone in this town already thinks he has cohorts.”

  “You’re insane!”

  “No. There’ll be nothing but a skeleton crew at the PD during the meeting—three, four guys. Maybe only a couple. I’m sure of it.”

  “I’m not!”

  “But tomorrow night’s a long way away. He has to string them along at least that far. Now get me that bowl.”

  “Jackie, I can’t do this.”

  “Yes, you can.” It was Rusty, standing in the doorway and looking relatively enormous in a pair of gym shorts and a New England Patriots tee-shirt. “It’s time to start taking risks, kids or no kids. We’re on our own here, and this has got to stop.”

  Linda looked at him for a moment, biting her lip. Then she bent to one of the lower cabinets. “The Tupperware’s down here.”

  23

  When they came into the police station, the duty desk was unmanned—Freddy Denton had gone home to catch some sleep—but half a dozen of the younger officers were sitting around, drinking coffee and talking, high enough on excitement to get up at an hour few of them had experienced in a conscious state for a long time. Among them Jackie saw two of the multitudinous Killian brothers, a smalltown biker chick and Dipper’s habitué named Lauren Conree, and Carter Thibodeau. The others she couldn’t name, but she recognized two as chronic truants from high school who had also been in on various minor drug and MV violations. The new “officers”—the newest of the new—weren’t wearing uniforms, but had swatches of blue cloth tied around their upper arms.

  All but one were wearing guns.

  “What are you two doing up so early?” Thibodeau asked, strolling over. “I got an excuse—ran out of pain pills.”

  The others guffawed like trolls.

  “Brought breakfast for Barbara,” Jackie said. She was afraid to look at Linda, afraid of what expression she might see on Linda’s face.

  Thibodeau peered into the bowl. “No milk?”

  “He doesn’t need milk,” Jackie said, and spit into the bowl of Special K. “I’ll wet it down for him.”

  A cheer went up from the others. Several clapped.

  Jackie and Linda got as far as the stairs before Thibodeau said, “Gimme that.”

  For a moment Jackie froze. She saw herself flinging the bowl at him, then taking to her heels. What stopped her was a simple fact: they had nowhere to run. Even if they made it out of the station, they’d be collared before they could get past the War Memorial.

  Linda took the Tupperware bowl from Jackie’s hands and held it out. Thibodeau peered into it. Then, instead of investigating the cereal for hidden treats, he spat into it himself.

  “My contribution,” he said.

  “Wait a minute, wait a minute,” the Conree girl said. She was a rangy redhead with a model’s body and acne-ravaged cheeks. Her voice was a little foggy, because she had one finger rammed up her nose to the second knuckle. “I got sumpin, too.” Her finger emerged with a large booger riding the end of it. Ms. Conree deposited it on top of the cereal, to more applause and someone’s cry of “Laurie mines for the green gold!”

  “Every box of cereal s’posed to have a toy surprise in it,” she said, smiling vacantly. She dropped her hand to the butt of the.45 she was wearing. Thin as she was, Jackie thought the recoil would probably blow her right off her feet if she ever had occasion to fire it.

  “All set,” Thibodeau said. “I’ll keep you company.”

  “Good,” Jackie said, and when she thought of how close she’d come to just putting the note in her pocket and trying to hand it to Barbie, she felt cold. All at once the risk they were taking seemed insane … but it was too late now. “Stay back by the stairs, though. And Linda, you keep behind me. We take no chances.”

  She thought he might argue that, but he didn’t.

  24

  Barbie sat up on the bunk. On the other side of the bars stood Jackie Wettington with a white plastic bowl in one hand. Behind her, Linda Everett had her gun drawn and held in a double fist, pointing at the floor. Carter Thibodeau was last in line at the foot of the stairs with his hair in sleep-spikes and his blue uniform shirt unbuttoned to show the bandage covering the dogbite on his shoulder.

  “Hello, Officer Wettington,” Barbie said. Thin white light was creeping in through his slit of a window. It was the kind of first light that makes life seem like the joke of jokes. “I’m innocent of all accusations. I can’t call them charges, because I haven’t been—”

  “Shut up,” Linda said from behind her. “We’re not interested.”

  “Tell it, Blondie,” Carter said. “You go, girl.” He yawned and scratched at the bandage.

  “Sit right there,” Jackie said. “Don’t you move a muscle.” Barbie sat. She pushed the plastic bowl through the bars. It was small, and just fit.

  He picked up the bowl. It was filled with what looked like Special K. Spit gleamed on top of the dry cereal. Something else as well: a large green booger, damp and threaded with blood. And still his stomach rumbled. He was very hungry.

  He was also hurt, in spite of himself. Because he’d thought Jackie Wettington, whom he had spotted as ex-military the first time he saw her (it was partly the haircut, mostly her way of carrying herself), was better than this. It had been easy to deal with Henry Morrison’s disgust. This was harder. And the other woman cop—the one married to Rusty Everett—was looking at him as if he were some rare species of stinging bug. He had hoped at least some of the department’s regular officers—

  “Eat up,” Thibodeau called from his place on the steps. “We fixed it nice for you. Didn’t we, girls?”

  “We did,” Linda agreed. The corners of her mouth twitched down. It was little more than a tic, but Barbie’s heart lightened. He thought she was faking. Maybe that was hoping for too much, but—

  She moved slightly, blocking Thibodeau’s line of sight to Jackie with her body … although there was no real need. Thibodeau was otherwise occupied with trying to peek under the edge of his bandage.

  Jackie glanced back to make sure she was clear, then pointed to the bowl, turned her hands up, and raised her eyebrows: Sorry. After that she pointed two fingers at Barbie. Pay attention.

  He nodded.

  “Enjoy it, fuckstick,” Jackie said. “We’ll get you something be
tter at noon. I’m thinking pissburger.”

  From the stairs, where he was now picking at the edges of the bandage, Thibodeau gave a bark of laughter.

  “If you’ve got any teeth left to eat it with,” Linda said.

  Barbie wished she had kept silent. She didn’t sound sadistic, or even angry. She only sounded scared, a woman who wished to be anywhere but here. Thibodeau, however, didn’t seem to notice. He was still investigating the state of his shoulder.

  “Come on,” Jackie said. “I don’t want to watch him eat.”

  “That wet enough for you?” Thibodeau asked. He stood up as the women came down the corridor between the cells to the stairs, Linda reholstering her weapon. “Cause if it’s not …” He hawked back phlegm.

  “I’ll make do,” Barbie said.

  “Course you will,” Thibodeau said. “For a while. Then you won’t.”

  They went up the stairs. Thibodeau went last, and gave Jackie a whack on the butt. She laughed and slapped at him. She was good, a lot better than the Everett woman. But they had both just shown plenty of guts. Fearsome guts.

  Barbie picked the booger off the Special K and flicked it toward the corner he’d pissed in. He wiped his hands on his shirt. Then he began to dig down through the cereal. At the bottom, his fingers found a slip of paper.

  Try to make it until tomorrow night. If we can get you out can you think of a safe place. You know what to do with this.

  Barbie did.

  25

  An hour after he ate the note and then the cereal, heavy footsteps slowly descended the stairs. It was Big Jim Rennie, already dressed in a suit and a tie for another day of under-the-Dome administration. He was followed by Carter Thibodeau and another fellow—a Killian, judging by the shape of his head. The Killian boy was carrying a chair, and making difficulties with it; he was what old-time Yankees would have called “a gormy lad.” He handed the chair to Thibodeau, who placed it in front of the cell at the end of the corridor.

  Rennie sat down, delicately tweezing his pantslegs first to preserve the crease.

 

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