A high keening sounded through his nose. And again, louder. Louder, louder again. Go.
Gravel showered behind the van as it shot forward, the house bouncing bigger in the windshield. The van slid sideways into the yard and Dolarhyde was out of it, running.
Inside, not looking left or right, pounding down the basement stairs, fumbling at the padlocked trunk in the basement, looking at his keys.
The trunk keys were upstairs. He didn’t give himself time to think. A high humming through his nose as loud as he could to numb thought, drown out voices as he climbed the stairs at a run.
At the bureau now, fumbling in the drawer for the keys, not looking at the picture of the Dragon at the foot of the bed.
“WHAT ARE YOU DOING?”
Where were the keys, where were the keys?
“WHAT ARE YOU DOING? STOP. I’VE NEVER SEEN A CHILD AS DISGUSTING AND DIRTY AS YOU. STOP.”
His searching hands slowed.
“LOOK . . . LOOK AT ME.”
He gripped the edge of the bureau—tried not to turn to the wall. He cut his eyes painfully away as his head turned in spite of him.
“WHAT ARE YOU DOING?”
“nothing.”
The telephone was ringing, telephone ringing, telephone ringing. He picked it up, his back to the picture.
“Hey, D., how are you feeling?” Reba McClane’s voice.
He cleared his throat. “Okay”—hardly a whisper.
“I tried to call you down here. Your office said you were sick—you sound terrible.”
“Talk to me.”
“Of course I’ll talk to you. What do you think I called you for? What’s wrong?”
“Flu,” he said.
“Are you going to the doctor? . . . Hello? I said, are you going to the doctor?”
“Talk loud.” He scrabbled in the drawer, tried the drawer next to it.
“Have we got a bad connection? D., you shouldn’t be there sick by yourself.”
“TELL HER TO COME OVER TONIGHT AND TAKE CARE OF YOU.”
Dolarhyde almost got his hand over the mouthpiece in time.
“My God, what was that? Is somebody with you?”
“The radio, I grabbed the wrong knob.”
“Hey, D., do you want me to send somebody? You don’t sound so hot. I’ll come myself. I’ll get Marcia to bring me at lunch.”
“No.” The keys were under a belt coiled in the drawer. He had them now. He backed into the hall, carrying the telephone. “I’m okay. I’ll see you soon.” The /s/s nearly foundered him. He ran down the stairs. The phone cord jerked out of the wall and the telephone tumbled down the stairs behind him.
A scream of savage rage. “COME HERE, CUNT FACE.”