even saw the little chip in the side.'
'He must have rigged that somehow -'
'Kevin, that seems pretty farf -'
'Listen,' Kevin said urgently, 'will you just
'All right. Yes. I'm listening.'
'What I remembered was that when he handed me the camera - when we went out back to crunch it, remember?'
'Yes ... and I remembered something.'
'I looked in the little window where the camera keeps count of how many shots there are left. And it said three, Dad! It said
'Well? What about it?'
'It had film in it, too!
'I repeat: so what?'
I had twenty-eight pictures. He wanted me to take thirty more, for a total of fifty-eight. I might have bought more film if I'd known what he was up to, but probably not. By then I was scared of the thing
'Yeah. I was, a little, too.'
Kevin looked at him respectfully. 'Were you?'
'Yeah. Go on. I think I see where you're heading.'
'I was just going to say, he chipped in for the film, but not enough - not even half. He's a wi
John Delevan smiled thinly. 'He is that, my boy. One of the world's greatest, is what I mean to say. Go on and finish up. Tem
Kevin glanced at the clock. It was almost eight. Although neither of them knew it, Pop would wake up in just under two minutes and start about his morning's business, very little of which he would remember correctly.
'All right,' Kevin said. 'All I'm trying to say is I couldn't have bought any more film even if I'd wanted to. I used up all the money I had buying the three film packs. I even borrowed a buck from Megan, so I let her shoot a couple, too.'
'Between the two of you, you used up a
'Yes!
'He
'Couldn't have w
Something had hit him, all right. How eager Pop had been to go downstairs and get the original Polaroids so they could all get a closer look at the thing around the dog's neck, the thing that turned out to be Kevin's latest string tie from Aunt Hilda, the one with the bird on it that was probably a woodpecker.
'D
'I suppose he could have,' Mr Delevan said. 'But why?'
Kevin could only shake his head. He didn't know why. But that was all right; Mr Delevan thought
Why, Pop, of course. Reginald Marion 'Pop' Merrill.
John Delevan had been sitting on the edge of Kevin's bed with an arm about his son's shoulders. Now he stood up. 'Get dressed. I'll go downstairs and call in. I'll tell Brandon I'll probably just be late, but to assume I won't be in at all.'
He was preoccupied with this, already talking to Brandon Reed in his mind, but not so preoccupied he didn't see the gratitude which lighted his son's worried face. Mr Delevan smiled a little and felt that uncharacteristic gloom first ease and then let go entirely. There was this much, at least: his son was as yet not too old to take comfort from him, or accept him as a higher power to whom appeals could sometimes be directed in the knowledge that they would be acted upon; nor was he himself too old to take comfort from his son's comfort.
'I think,' he said, moving toward the door, 'that we ought to pay a call on Pop Merrill.' He glanced at the clock on Kevin's night-table. It was ten minutes after eight, and in back of the Emporium Galorium, a sledgehammer was coming down on an imitation German cuckoo clock. 'He usually opens around eightthirty. just about the time we'll get there, I think. If you get a wiggle on, that is.'
He paused on his way out and a brief, cold smile flickered on his mouth. He was not smiling at his son. 'I think he's got some explaining to do, is what I mean to say.'
Mr Delevan went out, closing the door behind him. Kevin quickly began to dress.
CHAPTER 14
The Castle Rock LaVerdiere's Super Drug Store was a lot more than just a drugstore. Put another way, it was really only a drugstore as an afterthought. It was as if someone had noticed at the last moment - just before the grand opening, say - that one of the words in the sign was still 'Drug.' That someone might have made a mental note to tell someone else, someone in the company's management, that here they were, opening yet another LaVerdiere's, and they had by simple oversight neglected yet again to correct the sign so it read more simply and accurately, LaVerdiere's Super Store ... and, after making the mental note, the someone in charge of noticing such things had delayed the grand opening a day or two so they could shoehorn in a prescription counter about the size of a telephone booth in the long building's furthest, darkest, and most neglected corner.
The LaVerdiere's Super Drug Store was really more of a jumped-up five-and-dime than anything else. The town's