Doctor Sleep (The Shining, #2)(118)
Then she was gone.
17
Dan walked to John and Dave slowly and carefully, putting his hand on several of the picnic tables to keep his balance. He had picked up Abra’s stuffed rabbit without even realizing it. His head was clearing, but that was a decidedly mixed blessing.
“We have to go back to Anniston, and fast. I can’t touch Billy. I could before, but now he’s gone.”
“Abra?” Dave asked. “What about Abra?”
Dan didn’t want to look at him—Dave’s face was naked with fear—but he made himself do it. “She’s gone, too. So’s the woman in the hat. They’ve both dropped out of the mix.”
“Meaning what?” Dave grabbed Dan’s shirt in both hands. “Meaning what?”
“I don’t know.”
This was the truth, but he was afraid.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CROW
1
Get with me, Daddy, Barry the Chink had said. Lean close.
This was just after Snake had started the first of the porn DVDs. Crow got with Barry, even held his hand while the dying man struggled through his next cycle. And when he came back . . .
Listen to me. She’s been watching, all right. Only when that porno started up . . .
Explaining to someone who couldn’t do the locator thing was hard, especially when the one doing the talking was mortally ill, but Crow got the gist of it. The f*cksome frolickers by the pool had shocked the girl, just as Rose had hoped they might, but they had done more than make her quit spying and pull back. For a moment or two, Barry’s sense of her location seemed to double. She was still on the midget train with her dad, riding to the place where they were going to have their picnic, but her shock had produced a ghost image that made no sense. In this she was in a bathroom, taking a leak.
“Maybe you were seeing a memory,” Crow said. “Could that be?”
“Yeah,” Barry said. “Rubes think all kinds of crazy shit. Most likely it’s nothing. But for a minute it was like she was twins, you know?”
Crow didn’t, exactly, but he nodded.
“Only if that’s not it, she might be running some kind of game. Gimme the map.”
Jimmy Numbers had all of New Hampshire on his laptop. Crow held it up in front of Barry.
“Here’s where she is,” Barry said, tapping the screen. “On her way to this Cloud Glen place with her dad.”
“Gap,” Crow said. “Cloud Gap.”
“Whatever the f*ck.” Barry moved his finger northeast. “And this is where the ghost-blip came from.”
Crow took the laptop and looked through the bead of no doubt infected sweat Barry had left on the screen. “Anniston? That’s her hometown, Bar. She’s probably left psychic traces of herself all over it. Like dead skin.”
“Sure. Memories. Daydreams. All kinds of crazy shit. What I said.”
“And it’s gone now.”
“Yeah, but . . .” Barry grasped Crow’s wrist. “If she’s as strong as Rose says, it’s just possible that she really is gaming us. Throwing her voice, like.”
“Have you ever run across a steamhead that could do that?”
“No, but there’s a first time for everything. I’m almost positive she’s with her father, but you’re the one who has to decide if almost positive is good enough for . . .”
That was when Barry began cycling again, and all meaningful communication ceased. Crow was left with a difficult decision. It was his mission, and he was confident he could handle it, but it was Rose’s plan and—more important—Rose’s obsession. If he screwed up, there would be hell to pay.
Crow glanced at his watch. Three p.m. here in New Hampshire, one o’clock in Sidewinder. At the Bluebell Campground, lunch would just be finishing up, and Rose would be available. That decided him. He made the call. He almost expected her to laugh and call him an old woman, but she didn’t.
“You know we can’t entirely trust Barry anymore,” she said, “but I trust you. What’s your gut feeling?”
His gut felt nothing one way or the other; that was why he had made the call. He told her so, and waited.
“I leave it with you,” she said. “Just don’t screw up.”
Thanks for nothing, Rosie darlin. He thought this . . . then hoped she hadn’t caught it.
He sat with the closed cell phone still in his hand, swaying from side to side with the motion of the RV, inhaling the smell of Barry’s sickness, wondering how long it would be before the first spots started showing up on his own arms and legs and chest. At last he went forward and put his hand on Jimmy’s shoulder.
“When you get to Anniston, stop.”
“Why?”
“Because I’m getting off.”
2
Crow Daddy watched them pull away from the Gas ’n Go on Anniston’s lower Main Street, resisting an urge to send a short-range thought (all the ESP of which he was capable) to Snake before they got out of range: Come back and pick me up, this is a mistake.
Only what if it wasn’t?
When they were gone, he looked briefly and longingly at the sad little line of used cars for sale at the car wash adjacent to the gas station. No matter what transpired in Anniston, he was going to need transpo out of town. He had more than enough cash in his wallet to buy something that would carry him to their agreed-on rendezvous point near Albany on I-87; the problem was time. It would take at least half an hour to transact a car deal, and that might be too long. Until he was sure this was a false alarm, he would just have to improvise and rely on his powers of persuasion. They had never let him down yet.