Doctor Sleep
not?”
“They’ll have a good story for whythey’re traveling to New Hampshire and lots of good identity things. Also, they’re rich. Really rich, the way banks and oil companies and Walmart are rich. They might go away, but they’ll come back. They always come back for what they want. They kill people who get in their way, and people who try to tell on them, and if they need to buy their way out of trouble, that’s what they do.” She puther Coke down on the coffee table and put her arms around her father. “Please, Daddy, don’t tell anybody . I’d rather go with them than have them hurt Mom or you.”
Dan said, “But right now there are only four or five of them.”
“Yes.”
“Where are the rest? Do you know that now?”
“At a place called the Bluebird Campground. Or maybe it’s Bluebell. They own it. There’s a town nearby. That’s wherethe supermarket is, the Sam’s. The town is called Sidewinder. Rose is there, and the True. That’s what they call themselves, the . . . Dan? What’s wrong?”
Dan made no reply. For the moment, at least, he was incapable of speech. He was remembering Dick Hallorann’s voice coming from Eleanor Ouellette’s dead mouth. He had asked Dick where the empty devils were, and now the answer made sense.
In your childhood .
“Dan?” That was John. He sounded far away. “You’re as white as a sheet.”
It all made a weird kind of sense. He had known from the first—even before he actually saw it—that the Overlook Hotel was an evil place. It was gone now, burned flat, but who was to say the evil had also been burned away? Certainly not him. As a child, he had been visited by revenants who had escaped.
This campground they own—it stands where the hotel stood. I know it. And sooner or later, I’ll have to go back there. I know that, too. Probably sooner. But first—
“I’m all right,” he said.
“Want a Coke?” Abra asked. “Sugar solves lots of problems, that’s what I think.”
“Later. I have an idea. It’s sketchy, but maybe the four of us working together can turn it into a plan.”
6
Snakebite Andiparked in the truckers’ lot of a turnpike rest area near Westfield, New York. Nut went into the service plaza to get juice for Barry, who was now running a fever and had a painfully sore throat. While they waited for him to come back, Crow put through a call to Rose. She answered on the first ring. He filled her in as quickly as he could, then waited.
“What’s that I hear in the background?” sheasked.
Crow sighed and rubbed one hand up a stubbled cheek. “That’s Jimmy Numbers. He’s crying.”
“Tell him to shut up. Tell him there’s no crying in baseball.”
Crow conveyed this, omitting Rose’s peculiar sense of humor. Jimmy, at the moment wiping Barry’s face with a damp cloth, managed to muffle his loud and (Crow had to admit it) annoying sobs.
“That’s better,” Rose said.
“What do youwant us to do?”
“Give me a second, I’m trying to think.”
Crow found the idea of Rose having to try to think almost as disturbing as the red spots that had now broken out all over Barry’s face and body, but he did as he was told, holding the iPhone to his ear but saying nothing. He was sweating. Fever, or just hot in here? Crow scanned his arms for red blemishes and saw none. Yet.
“Are you onschedule?” Rose asked.
“So far, yes. A little ahead, even.”
There was a brisk double rap at the door. Andi looked out, then opened it.
“Crow? Still there?”
“Yes. Nut just came back with some juice for Barry. He’s got a bad sore throat.”
“Try this,” Walnut said to Barry, unscrewing the cap. “It’s apple. Still cold from the cooler. It’ll soothe your gullet something grand.”
Barry got up onhis elbows and gulped when Nut tipped the small glass bottle to his lips. Crow found it hard to look at. He’d seen baby lambs drink from nursing bottles in that same weak, I-can’t-do-it-myself way.
“Can he talk, Crow? If he can, give him the phone.”
Crow elbowed Jimmy aside and sat down beside Barry. “Rose. She wants to talk to you.”
He attempted to hold the phone next to Barry’s ear, but theChink took it from him. Either the juice or the aspirin Nut had made him swallow seemed to have given him some strength.
“Rose,” he croaked. “Sorry about this, darlin.” He listened, nodding. “I know. I get that. I . . .” He listened some more. “No, not yet, but . . . yeah. I can.
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