Ernie looked around and saw Jackie Wettington shaking, her eyes rolled up in their sockets, her fingers splayed.
'He's holding up a cross and everything's burning!' she screamed. Spittle sprayed from her lips. "The world is burning! THE PEOPLE ARE BURNING!' She let loose a shriek that filled the van.
Rusty almost ditched the van, pulled back into the middle of the road, leaped out, and ran around to the side door. By the time Barbie slide it open, Jackie was wiping spit from her chin with a cupped hand. Rommie had his arm around her.
'Are you all right?' Rusty asked her.
'Now, yes. I just... it was... everything was on fire. It was day, but it was dark. People were b-b-burning...' She started to cry.
'You said something about a man with a cross,' Barbie said.
'A big white cross. It 'was on a string, or a piece of rawhide. It was on his chest. His bare chest. Then he held it up in front of his face.' She drew in a deep breath, let it out in little hitches. 'It's all fading now. But... hoo!'
Rusty held two fingers up in front of her and asked how many she saw. Jackie gave the correct answer, and followed his thumb when he moved it first from side to side, then up and down. He patted her on the shoulder, then looked mistrustfully back at the glow-belt. What was it Gollum had said of Bilbo Baggins? It's tricksy, precious. 'What about you, Barbie? Okay?'
'Yeah. A little lightheaded for a few seconds, that's all. Ernie?'
'I saw my wife. And the hotel room we stayed in on our honeymoon. It was as clear as day'
He thought again of her coming to him. He hadn't thought of that in years, and what a shame to neglect such an excellent memory. The whiteness of her thighs below her shortie nightgown; the neat dark triangle of her pubic hair; her ni**les hard against silk, almost seeming to scrape the pads of his palms as she darted her tongue into his mouth and licked the inner lining of his lower lip.
This time we don't have to stop, honey.
Ernie leaned back and closed his eyes.
4
Rusty drove up the ridge - slowly now - and parked the van between the barn and the dilapidated farmhouse. The Sweetbriar Rose van was there; the Burpee's Department Store van; also a Chevrolet Malibu. Julia had parked her Prius inside the barn. Horace the Corgi sat by its rear bumper, as if guarding it. He did not look like a happy canine, and he made no move to come and greet them. Inside the farmhouse, a couple of Coleman lanterns glowed.
Jackie pointed at the van with EVERY DAY IS SALE DAY AT BURPEE'S on the side. 'How'd that get here? Did your wife change her mind?'
Rommie grinned. 'You don't know Misha if you ever t'ink dat. No, I got Julia to thank. She recruited her two star reporters. Dose guys - '
He broke off as Julia, Piper, and Lissa Jamieson appeared from the moonlit shadows of the orchard. They were stumbling along three abreast, holding hands, and all of them were crying.
Barbie ran to Julia and took her by the shoulders. She was on the end of their little line, and the flashlight she had been holding in her free hand dropped to the weedy dirt of the dooryard. She looked up at him and made an effort to smile. 'So they got you out, Colonel Barbara. That's one for the home team.'
"What happened to you?' Barbie asked.
Now Joe, Benny, and Norrie came running up with their mothers close behind them. The kids' shouts cut short when they saw the state the three women were in. Horace ran to his mistress, barking. Julia went to her knees and buried her face in his fur. Horace sniffed her,|then suddenly backed away. He sat down and howled. Julia looked at him and then covered her face, as if in shame. Norrie had grabbed Joe's hand on her left and Benny's on her right. Their faces were solejrm and scared. Pete Freeman,Tony Guay, and Rose Twitchell came out |of the farmhouse but did not approach; they stood clustered by the kitchen door.
'We went to look at it,' Lissa said dully. Her usual gosh-the-world-is-wonderful brightness was gone.'We knelt around it. There's a symbol on it I've never seen before... it's not kabbalah...'
'It's awful,' Piper said, wiping at her eyes.'And then Julia touched it. She was the only one, but we.... we all...'
'Did you see them?' Rusty asked.
Julia dropped her hands and looked at him with something like wonder. 'Yes. I did, we all did. Them. Horrible.'
'The leatherheads,' Rusty said.
' What?' Piper said. Then she nodded. 'Yes, I suppose you could call ithem that. Faces without faces. High faces.'
High faces, Rusty thought. He didn't know what it meant, but he knew it was true. He thought again of his daughters and their friend Deatina exchanging secrets and snacks. Then he thought of his best childhood friend - for a while, anyway; he and Georgie had fallen out violently in second grade - and horror rolled over him in a wave.
Barbie grabbed him. 'What?' He was almost shouting. 'What is it?'