The Chair
Page 19
“When I sat in the chair I got the impression I should call my brother.”
“I see.” Nicole sipped her coffee and studied him over the top of her cup. “Are you going to?”
“I doubt it.” Corin devoted the next five minutes to devouring his burger and slurping down his iced tea. Nicole stayed silent but continued to laser him with her piercing blue eyes.
“Why me?” Corin slid his water glass back and forth in front of him, the penny sitting in the center of the glass, looking bigger, feeling bigger than it was. Just like his fear. “Why did you give the chair to me?”
“You were the one I was supposed to give it to.”
“And how did you determine that?”
For the next two or three minutes Nicole only looked at him as she took small spoonfuls of her soup. It was unnerving. He was about to ask again when she finally spoke.
“I’ve been watching you and the other possibility for many years now. It became clear early on you were the most likely candidate, but I couldn’t give it to you till the time was right.”
“You’ve been watching me for years?” Corin leaned back in his chair and scowled. “That creeps me out.”
“Does it surprise you?”
No. It didn’t. Based on what he knew about her, it didn’t shock Corin at all. The confidence with which she’d given him the chair and their interactions since made it seem like she’d known him all her life.
He pushed his plate to the side of the table. “Why me? Why not the other one? I’m no one special.”
Nicole smoothed her pants as a lilting laugh escaped her lips. “That is so far from true.”
“It is true. I’ve done nothing.”
“You can do a dance step around your destiny for a time, but you can’t escape it forever.”
“What destiny? What are you talking about?”
“Your destiny. To have the chair.”
“It doesn’t make sense. I’m not female for one thing. Plus I’m full of doubt, full of fears. I’ve made—”
“Mistakes you regret with everything inside.” Nicole smiled. “Welcome to the human race. Let me read you something a friend gave me many years ago.” She pulled out a yellowed envelope and from it drew out a small gray note card.
“You are no one and you are everyone. You are glorious and you are nothing. You are mountains and valleys, You are glory and sin, And even when in the heart of your glory you can’t comprehend how deep His passion for you runs, Take hold of who you are. Know it in your soul. Run before the wind of the destiny He has created for you, And seek Him in every moment.”
Nicole slid the card back into her purse and wove her fingers together. “Do you understand?”
Corin reached to his left and grabbed a French fry off his plate. “You’re saying God chose me.”
“Yes. But be careful. Death has always surrounded the chair. As has healing. Dark and light. Evil and goodness. Joy and sorrow.”
“And His purpose in my having the chair is what?”
Nicole smoothed her coat. “That is the one part of this whole drama I have no doubt I know the answer to.”
“What’s the answer?”
She slid her chair back, stood, leaned over him, and patted his shoulder. “We’ll talk again soon, Corin. Stay strong and believe.” Nicole snatched a twentydollar bill from her purse and dropped it on the table. “He is for you.”
The click of her heels on the old linoleum floor seemed muted as she walked away. Or maybe it was because his brain was spinning too loudly for him to hear well.
He popped the French fry in his mouth. It was cold and he spit it into his napkin which he crumpled and tossed onto his plate. Corin stood and glanced at his watch.
The guy fixing his store window wouldn’t be done for another two or three hours. Tesser hadn’t returned his call so this was a perfect time to get in a workout. Time to go for a long inline skate. Time to get his mind off the chair and his brother and his own nagging neuroses.
But as he left the restaurant, something in the jangling of the bells on the front door gave him the feeling he wasn’t going to get it.
CHAPTER 34
On the way to G. Peterson Park, Corin considered putting a gun to Shasta’s head. It would be the only way he’d get his brother to sit in the chair. Or maybe he should sell it to Mark and try to forget it ever existed. Or give Tesser the chair and let him figure out if the thing was real.
Or move to Mexico with Tori and live on a thousand dollars a year.
He pulled his truck into the parking lot in front of the skate path and threw his gearshift into Park. The perfect spot to get away from everything and everyone. Few people would be here this time of the year with the temperature only in the mid-fifties.
After jamming his in-line skates onto his feet, he pushed off onto the path that wove through clusters of narrow-leaf cottonwood trees, scattered red and gold leaves mixed with their brothers and sisters who still held the green of summer in their hue.
Stop thinking about the chair for an hour. He could do it. Give himself just sixty minutes with nothing on the brain except working up a good sweat.
It wasn’t going to be possible.
Five minutes into his skate a scream sliced through his mind from over the hill to his right.
“Please, help me!”
Corin pulled off his skates on the edge of the grass and jogged toward the voice. A woman by the sound of it. As he crested the hill he spotted a heavyset lady who took tiny staggering steps back and forth in front of a large drain pipe.
She turned as Corin ran up to her. “Can you help me? Will you, please?”
A muffled yapping drifted out from deep inside the pipe.
“What’s—?”
“My puppy . . . she’s . . . I’m too . . .”—she brushed her hips—“big to get in there . . . I need . . . can you crawl in? Get her, please?” The woman’s baby blue mascara was smeared with tears and her hands trembled.
Corin squatted and glanced at the pipe. Forget it. Someone else would need to be Superman today. He could fit into the pipe but not comfortably and his brain wouldn’t fit at all.
“I’m sorry, tight spaces and I don’t get along. I can’t—”
“Please? There’s no one else out here. She’s already been in there for ten minutes.” The lady blinked and rubbed her stomach with both hands.
“Don’t worry. I can go get help, send someone down here to get your—”
“She’s my only family. She’s a cockapoo, so sweet, you know?” The woman knelt next to the pipe and sobbed. “If I lose her . . .”
“How far in?” Corin gritted his teeth. Why did he ask? He couldn’t do it even if the dog was only twenty feet in.
“I don’t know. Scoundrel sniffed inside the pipe and then started to go in . . .” More tears. “She yanked at the leash—I should have bought a new one, I know—and it snapped and . . . maybe she saw a rabbit . . . And I’ve called and called and she won’t come out . . . and I don’t know if she’s stuck or hurt or—”
“Listen, I’ll run and get some help, get someone back here in five minutes, ten at the most.”
“Fine.” All emotion drained out of her face. “That’s fine. It’s fine. I’ll be okay.”
“Are you sure?”
“No.” The woman shook her head and started crying again. “I don’t know if I can last that long. She’s probably not very far in.”
This was all too cliché. Woman’s dog gets stuck in drainpipe. Man happens along who is paralyzed by small spaces. Woman cries. Man gives in and crawls in pipe hating the woman, hating the dog, hating his fear. Why couldn’t it be a cat seventy feet up in a tree?
Corin peered into the pipe. Ten feet at the most before the darkness swallowed up the light. He could hold his breath for two and a half minutes. It was a trick he’d learned to give himself a shield of seconds against the panic onslaught. For some reason while holding his breath, the fear flitted at the edges of his mind and
didn’t enter until he’d released the air. If only it worked for more than just the first lungful. “I’ll try, but I doubt I’ll do any good.”
“Thank you,” the woman whispered.
Corin closed his eyes, put his ear next to the pipe, and listened for the dog’s whimper. Nothing. How deep had the mutt gone?
Arrooo.
Faint.
Wonderful. The thing was probably three hundred yards in. Concrete could magnify the sound making the dog’s cry seem closer than it was. Maybe she was six hundred yards in by now.
“What’s the dog’s name again?”
“Scoundrel.”
Corin squinted up at her. “You don’t happen to have a treat she’d be interested in?”
The woman shook her head.
Of course not.
“Like I said, I’m not fond of tight spaces so I’m going to give this a shot, but I won’t be able to last in there very long, understand? A couple of minutes at the most.”
The woman nodded.
“You don’t happen to have a flashlight, do you?”
She nodded again, reached inside her purse, and pulled out a small pink flashlight.
“I was kidding. I didn’t think—”
“Always be prepared I say.”
Except for having a new leash. Or a treat.
Corin took the light and flicked it on. It would help. Not much, but he’d take it. At times seeing how tight a space was helped. Most of the time it made things worse.
He studied the pipe again. He’d have three or four inches on each side, but it wouldn’t be easy to turn around once—if—he found the dog. Backing out if he couldn’t turn around? Lots of fun. And twice as long to do that as going forward.
“Once the panic button in my brain starts buzzing, I’ll have to come out and I’ll go get some help.”
The woman nodded again, wiped her eyes, and pointed. “Now? Please?”
“Okay.” Corin grabbed the sides of the pipe and pulled, as if he could expand the opening to three times its size, and took three long breaths. Here we go.
He sucked in hard, filling his lungs to capacity, then slung himself into the dark tube. Corin dragged himself forward by his elbows, pushing with his feet. This situation was a good thing. Fate was training him, pushing him to overcome the fear. He tried to believe it.
Aroooooo.
Close. The dog sounded close.
Think logically. The tube won’t collapse—wrong! Not the right kind of talk. Wrong word. The tube is strong. There’s plenty of air. This will be over soon. Stay strong.
There was no sensation of panic; he felt calm. But as soon as he needed another breath the feeling would vanish, replaced by a tingling sensation what would quickly morph into full-blown terror.
The pressure in his lungs built, pressing to get out. No. Think. You have plenty of air in your body. Ignore the pain. He didn’t need to breathe yet. He’d only been in the tube thirty, maybe forty seconds and was thirty-five, maybe forty yards inside the tube.
Two minutes thirty seconds.
He could hold his breath at least that long.
Steady. Plenty of time left.
Another whimper. Closer.
Time to turn on the flashlight. He pulled it from his hip pocket, flicked it on, and shone it down the pipe. Nothing.
Wait.
The light flashed against something metallic. Ten yards away. He had about twenty more seconds before he had to turn around.
“Scoundrel, come on, girl.” Corin puffed out, letting some of his precious air escape.
Another whimper, but no closer.
He pushed farther in and shone the light toward the sound. It reflected off Scoundrel’s eyes and he smiled. Corin was wrong. He’d misjudged. Scoundrel whimpered at him only five yards away.
They were going to make it.
Five seconds later Corin reached Scoundrel.
What the—?
The cockapoo wasn’t stuck. It strained against a thin rope that ran from its collar to a small piece of rebar that stuck out of the concrete pipe. Scoundrel wasn’t snagged; she was tied. Tight.
Corin ignored the sick feeling growing in his gut and dug into the rope. Too long, it was taking too long.
Finally he got it untied and yanked the cord through Scoundrel’s collar. The dog sprinted past Corin toward the light fifty yards behind them, claws rapping against the dry floor of the pipe.
Corin mashed himself into a ball and turned around, the walls of the pipe scraping against his arms and legs, then he glanced at his watch. Fifteen seconds to get back to the opening.
Not enough time.
Come on, Superman, move!
With twenty yards to go his lungs refused to hold the air any longer and it whooshed out of him like a geyser. He gasped and sucked in air like he was hanging on to a rubber raft in the middle of a class 4 rapid.
“You’re fine, you’re fine, you’re fine,” he puffed out as he waited for the fabricated wall of control to be demolished and the familiar waves of panic to rip through his mind. Let the battle begin.
But panic didn’t fill the empty space in his mind.
It would. He had only seconds now.
Think about being in Belize sipping a drink with an ugly little yellow umbrella. But he knew it wouldn’t help.
As he pulled in his second breath, he steadied himself for the onslaught of panic and continued to crawl toward the opening. But the fear didn’t come. Ten more seconds passed. Twenty. Thirty. Still nothing but calm sweeping through his mind.
He pictured the walls crushing in on him. Nothing. No fear. No panic. Just a peace that seemed to swirl from his feet to the top of his head, then it reversed itself and completed the circuit through his body again.
It made no sense.
An image of the chair filled his mind.
Yes, it did.
Unbelievable.
It was real.
Thirty seconds later he looked up toward the opening, a silhouette of the woman filling the opening of the pipe, sunlight streaming past the outline of her curly hair.
“Are you all right?” she called out to him.
“I’m good. Scoundrel is okay?”
“She’s fine.” The woman’s voice seemed different. The emotion gone from it. “You seem like a kind man.”
“Thanks, you seem kind too.” Another fifteen yards and he’d be outside.
“Which makes me feel really bad.” She kicked the inside of the pipe.
“What do you mean?”
“I’m so sorry for this. I don’t want to, but they told me I had to help and if I didn’t they’d . . . Well, I don’t want to talk about that, so just forgive me, okay?” Her arm disappeared as she reached up above the pipe. A moment later the iron grating slammed in front of the pipe and echoed in Corin’s ears.
She wouldn’t.
No.
“What are you doing?” Corin crawled like a wild man, tiny specs of gravel digging into his elbows and knees. Five yards.
The woman wrapped a padlock around the grate and slammed its latch shut. “I’m so sorry; I am.” She bent down, the crossed iron bars of the grate framing her large face. “I’m supposed to say you should have dropped it off like they asked you to, whatever that means.”
“Don’t lock me in here.”
“I’m so sorry.”
The woman lumbered away, Scoundrel’s bark fading as Corin slumped back and rubbed his face with dirt-covered hands.
He’d jumped right into their web and cuddled up next to the spider.
If he hadn’t been . . . he didn’t know what to call it . . . cured? healed? of his claustrophobia, his brain might have short-circuited.
Exactly what they’d wanted.
And when they came again for the chair, he would have melted in front of them and told them whatever they wanted to know. Maybe they’d be by in a hour, or two, or three and make him a simple deal: tell them where the chair was in exchange for setting him free.
>
Who had set him up?
At the moment it didn’t matter. All he wanted was to escape the pipe.
Corin spun and crawled back into the blackness till he reached a T in the pipe. He flashed on the light on his watch. He’d crawled for fifteen minutes. Right or left?
Left. It just felt right. He tried to laugh at his lame joke, but his brain gyrated with too many other questions.
Why had the chair healed him? He hadn’t felt anything when he sat in it.
Was it Jefferies? He was the obvious choice, but Corin couldn’t convince himself the pastor would go this far.
Would this lead to a way out, or was the pipe closed off at both ends of the T?
Seven minutes later he had his answer as he pushed up out of a storm-drain grate on a side street. Ten minutes after that he was back at his car, firing up the engine, knowing three things with absolute certainty.
First, he wouldn’t be selling Jefferies the chair.
Second, he had to tell Tesser and Nicole about his healing.
Third, he had to find a safer place to hide the chair.
CHAPTER 35
You’d better be there, old friend.
Corin had reached Tesser the night of the tunnel episode and arranged to meet out at Seven Falls on Sunday morning before Corin opened his store.
When he arrived, the old professor was already there, sitting on a bench perfectly centered in front of the 181-foot thundering waterfall, sipping a cup of coffee.
“Why do we have to meet here?” Tesser swatted at a mosquito on his wrist, then picked up his coffee and poured a splash on his forearm to wash it off. “I hate bugs.”
Corin had asked Tesser to meet him at the base of the falls for three reasons. First, it would be private this time of year. Back in August the tourists would swarm like the mosquitoes attacking Tesser. In late October people were stacking wood and starting to think cozy.
Second, he was paranoid. Whoever had tried to scramble his brain by locking him inside that pipe would likely be watching him closer than ever now. Technology certainly made it possible for the people after the chair to bug his home, Tesser’s home, and his car, and the thunder of the falls would keep their conversation private.