or National to deliver the car here or out to Camber's. So where's the
'I don't think it's important,' Vic said.
'And probably it's not. We'll find some simple explanation and say Oy
'Postitive.'
Masen shook his head. 'Why would she need all that rigamarole about loaners or rental cars anyway? That's a fifteen-minute fix for somebody with the tools and the know-how. Drive in, drive out. So where's -'
'- her goddam car?' Vic finished wearily. 'Me world was coming and going in waves now.
'Why don't you go upstairs and lie down?' Masen said. 'You looked wiped out.'
'No, I want to be awake if something happens--.'
'And if something does, somebody will he here to wake you up. The FBI's coming with a trace-back system to hook up on your phone. Those people are noisy enough to wake the dead -so don't worry.'
Vic was too tired to feel much more than a dull dread. 'Do you think that trace-back shit is really necessary?'
'Better to have it and not need it than need it and not have it,' Masen said, and pitched his cigarette. 'Get a little rest and you'll be able to cope better, Vic. Go on.'
'All right.'
He went slowly upstairs. The bed had been stripped to the mattress. He had done it himself. He put two pillows on his side, took off his shoes, and lay down. The morning sun shone fiercely in through the window. I
But by the time the phone woke him up, that day's burning noon had come.
Charity Camber had her morning coffee and then called Alva Thornton in Castle Rock. This time Alva himself answered.
He knew that she had chatted with Bessie the night before. 'Nope,' Alva said. 'I ain't seed hide nor hair of Joe since last Thursday or so, Charity. He brought over a tractor tire he fixed for me. Never said nothing about feeding Cujo, although I'd've been happy to.'
'Alva, could you run up to the house and check on Cujo) Brett saw him Monday morning before we left for my sister's, and he thought he looked sick. And I just don't know who Joe would have gotten to feed him.' After the way of country people, she added: 'No hurry.'
'I'll take a run up and check,' Alva said. 'Let me get those damn cacklers fed and watered and I'm gone.'
That would be fine, Alva,' Charity said gratefully, and gave him her sister's number. 'Thanks so much.'
They talked a little more, mostly about the weather. The constant heat had Alva worried about his chickens. Then she hung up.
Brett looked up from his cereal when she came into the kitchen. Jim junior was very carefully making rings on the table with his orange juice glass and talking a mile a minute. He had decided sometime during the last forty-eight hours that Brett Camber was a dose relation to Jesus Christ.
'Well?' Brett asked.
'You were right. Dad didn't ask Alva to feed him.' She saw the disappointment and worry on Brett's face and went on: 'But he's going up to check on Cujo this morning, as soon as he's got his chickens tended to. I left the number this time. He said he'd call back one way or the other.'
'Thanks, Mom.'
Jim clattered back from the table as Holly called him to come upstairs and get dressed. 'Wanna come up with me, Brett?'
Brett smiled. 'I'll wait for you, slugger.'
'Okay.' Jim ran out trumpeting, 'Mom! Brett said he'd wait! Brett's gonna wait for me to get dressed!'
A thunder, as of elephants, on the stairs.
'He's a nice kid,' Brett said casually.
'I thought,' Charity said, 'that we might go home a little early. If that's all right with you.'
Brett's face brightened, and in spite of all the decisions she had come to, that brightness made her feel a Iittle sad. 'When?' he asked.
'How does tomorrow sound? She had been intending to suggest Friday.
'Great! But' - he Iooked at her closely -'are you done visiting, Mom? I mean, she's your sister.'
Charity thought of the credit cards, and of the Wurlitzer jukebox Holly's husband had been able to afford but did not know how to fix. Those were the things that had impressed Brett, and she supposed they had impressed her as well in some way. Perhaps she had seen them through Brett's eyes a little ... through Joe's eyes. And enough was enough.
'Yes,' she said. 'I guess I've done my visiting. I'll tell Holly this morning.'
'Okay, Mom.' He looked at her a little shyly. 'I wouldn't mind coming back, you know. I do like them. And he's a neat little kid. Maybe he can come up to Maine sometime.'
'Yes,' she said, surprised and grateful. She didn't think Joe would object to that. 'Yes, maybe that could be arranged.'
'Okay. And tell me what Mr. Thornton said.'
'I will.'
But Alva never called back. As he was feeding his chickens that morning, the motor in his big air conditioner blew, and he was immediately in a life-or-death struggle to save his birds before the day's heat could kill them. Donna Trenton might have called it another stroke of that same Fate she saw reflected in Cujo's muddy, homicidal eyes. By the time the issue of the air conditioner was settled, it was four in the afternoon (Alva Thornton lost sixtytwo chickens that day and counted himself off cheaply), and the confrontation which had begun Monday afternoon in the Cambers' sunstruck dooryard was over.
Andy Masen was the Maine Attorney General's
He came from a large, poor family. He and his three brothers and two sisters had grown up in a ramshackle 'poor white trash' house on the outer Sabbatus Road in the town of Lisbon. His brothers and sisters had been exactly up - or down - to town expectations. Only Andy Masen and his youngest brother, Marry, had managed to finish high school. For a while it had looked as if Roberta might make it, but she had gotten herself knocked up higher than a kite following a dance her senior year. She had left school to marry the boy, who still had pimples at twenty-nine, drank Narragansett straight from the can, and knocked both her and the kid around. Marry had been killed in a car crash over on Route 9 in Durham. He and some of his drunk friends had tried to take the tight curve up Sirois Hill at seventy. The Camaro in which they were riding rolled over twice and burned.
Andy had been the star of the family, but his mother had never liked him. She was a little afraid of him. When talking to friends she would say, 'My Andy's a cold fish,' but he was more than that. He was always tightly controlled, always buttoned up. He knew from the fifth grade on that he was going to somehow get through college and become a lawyer. Lawyers made a lot of money. Lawyers worked with logic. Logic was Andy's God.