Pet Sematary - Stephen King [163]
So dis Jew peddler come in and he say I got sumpin you never seen before. These poscards, dey jus look like wimmin in bathin suits until you rub dem wit a wet cloth, and den-
Juds head nodded. His chin settled slowly, gently, against his chest.
-deys as nakid as the day dey was born! But when dey dry, the cloes, dey come back on! And dat aint all! I got-
René telling this story in the coupling shed, leaning forward, smiling, and Jud holds the bottle-he feels the bottle and his hand closes around it on thin air.
In the ashtray, the cigarette ash on the end of the cigarette grew longer. At last it tipped forward into the ashtray and burned out, its shape recalled in the neat roll of ash like a rune.
Jud slept.
And when the taillights flashed outside and Louis turned the Honda Civic into his driveway some forty minutes later and drove it into the garage, Jud did not hear, stir, or awaken, any more than Peter awoke when the Roman soldiers came to take a tramp named Jesus into their custody.
53
Louis found a fresh dispenser of strapping tape in one of the kitchen drawers, and there was a coil of rope in the corner of the garage near last winters snow tires. He used the tape to bind the
pick and shovel together in a single neat bundle and the rope to fashion a rough sling.
Tools in the sling. Gage in his arms.
He looped the sling over his back, then opened the passenger door of the Civic, pulling the bundle out. Gage was much heavier than Church had been. He might well be crawling by the time he got his boy up to the Micmac burying ground-and he would still have the grave to dig, lighting his way through that stony, unforgiving soil.
Well, he would manage. Somehow.
Louis Creed stepped out of his garage, pausing to thumb off the light switch with his elbow, and stood for a moment at the place where asphalt gave way to grass. Ahead of him he could see the path leading to the Pet Sematary well enough in spite of the blackness; the path, with its short grass, glowed with a kind of luminescence.
The wind pushed and pulled its fingers through his hair, and for a moment the old, childlike fear of the dark rushed through him, making him feel weak and small and terrorized. Was he really going into the woods with this corpse in his arms, passing under the trees where the wind walked, from darkness into darkness? And alone this time?
Dont think about it. Just do it.
Louis got walking.
By the time he got to the Pet Sematary twenty minutes later, his arms and legs were trembling with exhaustion, and he collapsed with the rolled-up tarpaulin across his knees, gasping. He rested there for another twenty minutes, almost dozing, no longer fearful-exhaustion had driven fear out, it seemed.
Finally he got to his feet again, not really believing he could climb the deadfall, only knowing in some numb sort of way that he must try. The bundle in his arms seemed to weigh two hundred pounds instead of forty.
But what had happened before happened again; it was like suddenly, vividly remembering a dream., No, not remembering; reliving. When he placed his foot on the first dead treetrunk, that queer sensation rushed through him again, a feeling that was almost exultation. The weariness did not leave him, but it became bearable-unimportant, really.
Just follow me. Follow me and dont look down, Louis. Dont hesitate and dont look down. I know the way through, but it has to be done quick and sure.
Quick and sure, yes-the way Jud had removed the stinger.
I know the way through.
But