“One, then.” He put the shift in reverse… then put it back in park. He leaned out the window, and she realized he wanted a kiss. She gave him a good one with the town whistle blowing across the crisp October air, and he caressed the side of her throat while their mouths were together, a thing that always gave her the shivers and he hardly ever did anymore.
His touch there in the sunshine: she never forgot that, either.
As he rolled down the driveway, she called something after him. He caught part of it but not all. He really was going to have to get his ears checked. Let them fit him with a hearing aid if necessary. Although that would probably be the final thing Randolph and Big Jim needed to kick him out on his aging ass.
Duke braked and leaned out again. “Take care of my
“Oh, you bet!” he called back, and drove away. The next time she saw him, he was dead.
2
Billy and Wanda Debec never heard the double boom because they were on Route 117, and because they were arguing. The fight had started simply enough, with Wanda observing it was a beautiful day and Billy responding he had a headache and didn’t know why they had to go to the Saturday flea market in Oxford Hills, anyway; it would just be the usual pawed-over crap.
Wanda said that he wouldn’t have a headache if he hadn’t sunk a dozen beers the night before.
Billy asked her if she had counted the cans in the recycling bin (no matter how loaded he got, Billy did his drinking at home and always put the cans in the recycling bin—these things, along with his work as an electrician, were his pride).
She said yes she had, you bet she had. Furthermore—
They got as far as Patel’s Market in Castle Rock, having progressed through
Meanwhile, Wanda asked Billy where he thought he was going.
Billy said back home to take a nap. She could go to the shitfair on her own.
Wanda observed that he had almost hit those two old ladies (said old ladies now dropping behind fast; Nora Robichaud felt that, lacking some damned good reason, speeds over forty miles an hour were the devil’s work).
Billy observed that Wanda both looked and sounded like her mother.
Wanda asked him to elucidate just what he meant by that.
Billy said that both mother and daughter had fat asses and tongues that were hung in the middle and ran on both ends.
Wanda told Billy he was hungover.
Billy told Wanda she was ugly.
It was a full and fair exchange of feelings, and by the time they crossed from Castle Rock into Motton, headed for an invisible barrier that had come into being not long after Wanda had opened this spirited discussion by saying it was a beautiful day, Billy was doing better than sixty, which was almost top end for Wanda’s little Chevy shitbox.
“What’s that smoke?” Wanda asked suddenly, pointing northeast, toward 119.
“I don’t know,” he said. “Did my mother-in-law fart?” This cracked him up and he started laughing.
Wanda Debec realized she had finally had enough. This clarified the world and her future in a way that was almost magical. She was turning to him, the words
Wanda’s head collided with the dashboard, and the sudden, catastrophic relocation of the Chevy’s engine block broke one of her legs (the left) and one of her arms (the right). She was not aware of any pain, only that the horn was blaring, the car was suddenly askew in the middle of the road with its front end smashed almost flat, and her vision had come over all red.