‘Why don’t I go?’
‘Because I know the town, and the town knows me-like they knew my father. The live ones in the Lot are hiding in their houses today. If you come knocking, they won’t answer. If I come, most of them will. I know some of the hiding places. I know where the winos shack up out in the Marshes and where the pulp roads go. You don’t. Can you run that lathe?’
‘Yes,’ Ben said.
Jimmy was right, of course. Yet the relief he felt at not having to go out and face
‘Okay. Get going. It’s after noon now.’
Ben turned to the lathe, then paused. ‘If you want to wait a half hour, I can give you maybe half a dozen stakes to take with you.’
Jimmy paused a moment, then dropped his eyes. ‘Uh, I think tomorrow… tomorrow would be…’
‘Okay,’ Ben said. ‘Go on. Listen, why don’t you come back around three? Things ought to be quiet enough around that school by then so we can check it out.’
‘Good.’
Jimmy stepped away from Petrie’s shop area and started for the stairs. Something-a half thought or perhaps inspiration-made him turn. He saw Ben across the basement, working under the bright glare of those three lights, hung neatly in a row.
Something… and it was gone.
He walked back.
Ben shut off the lathe and looked at him. ‘Something else?’
‘Yeah,’ Jimmy said. ‘On the tip of my tongue. But it’s stuck there.’
Ben raised his eyebrows.
‘When I looked back from the stairs and saw you, something clicked. It’s gone now.’
‘Important?’
‘I don’t know.’ He shuffled his feet purposelessly, wanting it to come back. Something about the image Ben had made, standing under those work lights, bent over the lathe. No good. Thinking about it only made it seem more distant.
He went up the stairs, but paused once more to look back. The image was hauntingly familiar, but it wouldn’t come. He went through the kitchen and out to the car. The rain had faded to drizzle.
37
Roy McDougall’s car was standing in the driveway of the trailer lot on the Bend Road, and seeing it there on a weekday made Jimmy suspect the worst.
He and Mark got out, Jimmy carrying his black bag. They mounted the steps and Jimmy tried the bell. It didn’t work and so he knocked instead. The pounding roused no one in the McDougall trailer or in the neighboring one twenty yards down the road. There was a car in that driveway, too.
Jimmy tried the storm door and it was locked. ‘There’s a hammer in the back seat of the car,’ he said.
Mark got it, and Jimmy smashed the glass of the storm door beside the knob. He reached through and unsnapped the catch. The inside door was unlocked. They went in.
The smell was definable instantly, and Jimmy felt his nostrils cringe against it and try to shut it out. The smell was not as strong as it had been in the basement of the Marsten House, but it was just as basically offensive-the smell of rot and deadness. A wet, putrefied stink. Jimmy found himself remembering when, as boys, he and his buddies had gone out on their bikes during spring vacation to pick up the returnable beer and soft-drink bottles the retreating snows had uncovered. In one of those (an Orange Crush bottle) he saw a small, decayed field mouse which had been attracted by the sweetness and had then been unable to get out. He had gotten a whiff of it and had immediately turned away and thrown up. This smell was plangently like that-sickish sweet and decayed sour, mixed together and fermenting wildly. He felt his gorge rise.
‘They’re here,’ Mark said. ‘Somewhere.’
They went through the place methodically - kitchen, dining nook, living room, the two bedrooms. They opened closets as they went. Jimmy thought they had found something in the master bedroom closet, but it was only a heap of dirty clothes.
‘No cellar?’ Mark asked.
‘No, but there might be a crawl space.
They went around to the back and saw a small door that swung inward, set into the trailer’s cheap concrete foundation. It was fastened with an old padlock. Jimmy knocked it off with five hard blows of the hammer, and when he pushed the half-trap open, the smell hit them in a ripe wave.
‘There they are,’ Mark said.
Peering in, Jimmy could see three sets of feet, like corpses lined up on a battlefield. One set wore work boots, one wore knitted bedroom slippers, and the third set-tiny feet indeed-were bare.
Family scene, Jimmy thought crazily.
He made a mark with the black grease pencil on the trap and picked up the broken padlock. ‘Let’s go next door,’ he said.