Page 269 of Under the Dome

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Thurse was looking down, bemused. He had stuck the metal-snips in his belt.

'I'll just put these back under the milk box - '

Linda snatched them before he could finish, restrained a momentary urge to bury them up to the handles in his narrow chest - admirable restraint, she thought - and got out to put them away herself.

As she did, a vehicle slid in behind the van, blocking access to West Street, the only way out of this cul-de-sac.

Atop Town Common Hill, just below the Y-intersection where Highland Avenue split off from Main Street, Jim Rennie's Hummer sat idling. From below came the amplified exhortations for people to leave their cars and walk unless they were disabled. People were flowing down the sidewalks, many with packs on their backs. Big jim eyed them with that species of longsuffering contempt which is felt only by caretakers who do their jobs not out of love but out of duty.

Going against the tide was Carter Thibodeau. He was striding in the middle of the street, every now and then shoving someone out of his way. He reached the Hummer, got in on the passenger side, and armed sweat from his forehead. 'Man, that AC feels good. Not hardly eight in the morning and it's got to be seventy-five degrees out there already. And the air smells like a frickin ashtray. 'Scuse the language, boss.'

'What kind of luck did you have?'

'The bad kind. I talked to Officer Everett. Ex-Officer Everett. The others are in the breeze.'

'Does she know anything?'

'No. She hasn't heard from the doc. And Wettington treated her like a mushroom, kept her in the dark and fed her shit.'

'You're sure?'

'Yeah.'

'Her kids there with her?'

'Yup. The hippy, too. The one who straightened out your ticker. Plus the two kids Junior and Frankie found out at the Pond.' Carter thought about this. 'With his chick dead and her husband gone, him and Everett'll probably be boinking each other's brains out by the end of the week. If you want me to take another run at her, boss, I will.'

Big Jim flicked a single finger up from the steering wheel to show that wouldn't be necessary. His attention was elsewhere. 'Look at them, Carter.'

Carter couldn't very well help it. The foot traffic out of town was thickening every minute.

'Most of them will be at the Dome by nine, and their cotton-picking relatives won't arrive until ten. At the earliest. By then they'll be good and thirsty. By noon the ones who didn't think to bring water will be drinking cow-piddle out of Alden Dinsmore's pond, God love them. God must love them, because the majority are too dumb to work and too nervous to steal.'

Carter barked laughter.

'That's what we've got to deal with,' Rennie said. 'The mob. The cotton-picking rabble. What do they want, Carter?'

'I don't know, boss.'

'Sure you do. They want food, Oprah, country music, and a warm bed to thump uglies in when the sun goes down. So they can make more just like them. And goodness me, here comes another member of the tribe.'

It was Chief Randolph, trudging up the hill and mopping his bright red face with a handkerchief.

Big Jim was now in full lecture mode. 'Our job, Carter, is to take care of them.We may not like it, we may not always think they're worth it, but it's the job God gave us. Only to do it, we have to take care of ourselves first, and that's why a good deal of fresh fruit and veg from Food City was stored in the Town Clerks office two days ago. You didn't know that, did you? Well, that's all right. You're a step ahead of them and I'm a step ahead of you and that's how it's supposed to be. The lesson is simple: the Lord helps those that help themselves.'

'Yes, sir.'

Randolph arrived. He was puffing, there were circles under his eyes, and he appeared to have lost weight. Big Jim pushed the button that ran down his window.

'Step in, Chief, grab yourself some AC And when Randolph started for the front passenger seat, Big Jim added:'Not there, Carter's sitting there.' He smiled. 'Get in back.'

3

It wasn't a police car that had pulled up behind the Odyssey van; it was the hospital ambulance. Dougie Twitchell was at the wheel. Ginny Tomlinson was in the passenger seat with a sleeping baby in her lap. The rear doors opened and Gina Buffalino got out. She was still in her candy-striper uniform. The girl who followed her, Harriet Bigelow, wore jeans and a tee-shirt that said U.S. OLYMPIC KISSING TEAM.

'What... what...' That seemed to be all Linda was capable of. Hfer heart was racing, the blood pounding so hard in her head that she seemed to feel her eardrums flapping.

Twitch said, 'Rusty called and told us to get out to the orchard at Black Ridge. I didn't even know there was an orchard up there, but Ginny did, and... Linda? Honey, you're white as a ghost.'

'I'm okay,' Linda said, and realized she was on the verge of faintrhg. She pinched her earlobes, a trick Rusty had taught her a long time ago. Like many of his folk-remedies (beating down wens with the spine of a heavy book was another), it worked. When she spoke1 again, her voice seemed both nearer and somehow realcr. 'He told you to come here first?'

'Yes. To get some of that.' He pointed to the lead roll sitting on the loading dock. 'Just to be on the safe side is what he said. But I'll need those snips.'

'Uncle Twitch!'Janelle cried, and dashed into his arms.

'What's up,Tiger Lily?' He hugged her, swung her, set her down. Janelle peered into the passenger window at the baby. 'What's her name?'

'It's a he,' Ginny said. 'His name's Little Walter.'

'Cool!'

'Jannie, get back in the van, we have to go,' Linda said.

Thurse asked, 'Who's minding the store, you guys?'

Ginny looked embarrassed.'Nobody. But Rusty said not to worry, unless there was somebody in need of constant care. Other than Little Walter, there wasn't. So I grabbed the baby and we boogied. We might be able to go back later, Twitch says.'


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