After that, the people in Dipper’s watched the woods on the Tarker’s side of the Dome burst into flame. They watched the asphalt on that side first buckle and then begin to melt.
20
“Fire the other one,” Cox said dully, and Gene Ray did. It broke more windows and scared more people in eastern New Hampshire and western Maine.
Otherwise, the result was the same.
IN THE FRAME
1
At 19 Mill Street, home of the McClatchey family, there was a moment of silence when the recording ended. Then Norrie Calvert burst into fresh tears. Benny Drake and Joe McClatchey, after looking at each other over her bowed head with identical
“That’s
No one answered. Barbie was perched on the arm of the easy chair where Julia was sitting.
Mrs. McClatchey got to her feet. She still held her husband’s picture. Sam had gone to the flea market that ran at Oxford Speedway each Saturday until the weather got too cold. His hobby was refinishing furniture, and he often found good stuff at the stalls there. Three days later he was still in Oxford, sharing space at the Raceway Motel with several platoons of reporters and TV people; he and Claire couldn’t speak to each other on the phone, but had been able to stay in touch by e-mail. So far.
“What happened to your computer, Joey?” she asked. “Did it blow up?”
Joe, his arm still around Norrie’s shoulders, his hand still gripping Benny’s wrist, shook his head. “I don’t think so,” he said. “It probably just melted.” He turned to Barbie. “The heat might set the woods on fire out there. Someone ought to do something about that.”
“I don’t think there are any fire engines in town,” Benny said. “Well, maybe one or two old ones.”
“Let me see what I can do about that,” Julia said. Claire McClatchey towered over her; it was easy enough to see where Joe had gotten his height. “Barbie, it would probably be best if I handled this on my own.”
“Why?” Claire looked bewildered. One of her tears finally over-spilled and ran down her cheek. “Joe said the government put you in charge, Mr. Barbara—the President himself!”
“I had a disagreement with Mr. Rennie and Chief Randolph about the video feed,” Barbie said. “It got a little hot. I doubt if either of them would welcome my advice just now. Julia, I don’t think they’d exactly welcome yours, either. At least not yet. If Randolph’s halfway competent, he’ll send a bunch of deputies out there with whatever’s left in the firebarn. At the very least, there’ll be hoses and Indian pumps.”
Julia considered this, then said: “Would you step outside with me for a minute, Barbie?”
He looked at Joe’s mother, but Claire was no longer paying them any attention. She had moved her son aside and was sitting next to Norrie, who pressed her face against Claire’s shoulder.
“Dude, the government owes me a computer,” Joe said as Barbie and Julia walked toward the front door.
“Noted,” Barbie said. “And thank you, Joe. You did well.”
“A lot better than their damn missile,” Benny muttered.
On the front stoop of the McClatchey home, Barbie and Julia stood silent, looking toward the town common, Prestile Stream, and the Peace Bridge. Then, in a voice that was low-pitched and angry, Julia said: “He’s not. That’s the thing. That’s the goddam thing.”
“Who’s not what?”
“Peter Randolph is not halfway competent. Not even one-quarter.
I went to school with him all the way from kindergarten, where he was a world-champion pants-wetter, to twelfth grade, where he was part of the Bra-Snapping Brigade. He was a C-minus intellect who got B-minus grades because his father was on the school board, and his brainpower has not increased. Our Mr. Rennie has surrounded himself with dullards. Andrea Grinnell is an exception, but she’s also a drug addict. OxyContin.”
“Back problems,” Barbie said. “Rose told me.”
Enough of the trees on the common had shed their leaves for Barbie and Julia to be able to see Main Street. It was deserted now—most people would still be at Dipper’s, discussing what they had seen—but its sidewalks would soon fill with stunned, disbelieving townsfolk drifting back to their homes. Men and women who would not yet even dare ask each other what came next.
Julia sighed and ran her hands through her hair. “Jim Rennie thinks if he just keeps all the control in his own hands, things will eventually come rightside up. For him and his friends, at least. He’s the worst kind of politician— selfish, too egocentric to realize he’s way out of his league, and a coward underneath that bluff cando exterior of his. When things get bad enough, he’ll send this town to the devil if he thinks he can save himself by doing so. A cowardly leader is the most dangerous of men. You’re the one who should be running this show.”
“I appreciate your confidence—”
“But that’s not going to happen no matter what your Colonel Cox and the President of the United States may want. It’s not going to happen even if fifty thousand people march down Fifth Avenue in New York, waving signs with your face on them. Not with that fucking Dome still over our heads.”
“Every time I listen to you, you sound less Republican,” Barbie remarked.
She struck him on the bicep with a surprisingly hard fist. “This is not a joke.”
“No,” Barbie said. “It’s not a joke. It’s time to call for elections. And I urge you to stand for Second Selectman yourself.”
She looked at him pityingly. “Do you think Jim Rennie is going to allow elections as long as the Dome is in place? What world are you living in, my friend?”
“Don’t underestimate the will of the town, Julia.”
“And don’t
“I was expecting an idea from you, not a political analysis.”
For a moment he thought she was going to hit him again. Then she drew in a breath, let it out, and smiled. “You come on all awshucks, but you’ve got some thorns, don’t you?”
The Town Hall whistle began to blow a series of short blasts into the warm, still air.
“Someone’s called in a fire,” Julia said. “I think we know where.”
They looked west, where rising smoke smudged the blue. Barbie thought most of it had to be coming from the Tarker’s Mills side of the Dome, but the heat would almost certainly have ignited small fires on the Chester side as well.
“You want an idea? Okay, here’s one. I’ll track down Brenda—she’ll either be at home or at Dipper’s with everyone else—and suggest she take charge of the fire-fighting operation.”