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Pet Sematary - Stephen King [132]

By Root 587 0
box and all, as he headed back to Ludlow. He wasnt a litterbug by nature, but he did not want Rachel to see a mostly uneaten pizza at home in the wastebasket. It might raise a surmise in her mind-that a pizza wasnt really what hed had in mind when he went to Bangor.

Louis now began to think about the time and circumstance.

Time. Time might be of extreme, even crucial, importance. Timmy Baterman had been dead a good while before his father could get him up to the Micmac burying ground. Timmy was shot the nineteenth Timmy was buried-dont hold me to this, but I think it was July twenty-second. It was four or five days later that Marjorie Washburn saw Timmy walking up the road.

All right, say that Bill Baterman had done it four days after his sons original interral no. If he was going to err, let him err on the side of conservatism. Say three days. For the sake of argument, assume that Timmy Baterman returned from the dead on July twenty-fifth. That made six days between the boys death and his return, and that was a conservative estimate. It might have been as long as ten days. For Gage, it had now been four

days. Time had already gotten away from him to a degree, but it was still possible to cut Bifi Batermans best time considerably. If

If he could bring about circumstances similar to those which had made the resurrection of Church possible. Because Church had died at the best possible time, hadnt he? His family had been away when Church was struck and killed. No one was the wiser, except for him and Jud.

His family had been in Chicago.

For Louis, the final piece fell into place with a neat little click.

You want us to what? Rachel asked, staring at him, astounded.

It was a quarter of ten. Ellie had gone to bed. Rachel had taken another Valium after cleaning up the detritus of the funeral party (funeral party was another of those horrible phrases full of unstated paradox, like visiting hours, but there seemed no other phrase for the way they had spent their afternoon) and had seemed dazed and quiet ever since he returned from Bangor but this had gotten through.

To go back to Chicago with your mother and father, Louis repeated patiently. Theyll be going tomorrow. If you call them now and Delta right after, you may be able to get on the same plane with them.

Louis, have you lost your mind? After the fight you had with my father-

Louis found himself speaking with a quick glibness that was totally unlike him. It afforded him a cheesy sort of exhilaration. He felt like a football sub who suddenly gets the ball and makes a seventy-yard touchdown run, cutting and weaving, outthinking potential tacklers with a delirious one-time-only ease. He had never been a particularly good liar, and he had not planned this encounter in any detail at all, but now a string of plausible lies, half-truths, and inspired justification poured out of him.

The fight we had is one of the reasons I want you and Ellie to go back with them. Its time we sewed up this wound, Rachel. I knew that felt it at the funeral parlor. When the fight started, I was trying to patch things up.

But this trip I dont think its a good idea at all, Louis. We need you. And you need us. Her eyes measured him doubt-

fully. At least, I hope you need us. And neither of us are in any shape to-

-in any kind of shape to stay here, Louis said forcefully. He felt as if he might be coming down with a fever. Im glad you need me, and I do need you and Ellie. But right now this is the worst damn place in the world for you, honey. Gage is everywhere in this house, around every corner. For you and me, sure. But its even worse for Ellie, I think.

He saw pain flicker in her eyes and knew he had touched her. Some part of himself felt shame at this cheap victory. All the textbooks hed read on the subject of death told him that the bereaveds first strong impulse is to get away from the place where it happened and that to succumb to such an impulse may turn out to be the most harmful course of action because it allows the bereaved the dubious luxury of refusing to come to terms with

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