The Langoliers Read online

Page 16


  “Why? He’s tied up, isn’t he?”

  “Yes, but—”

  “And you could always call for the others, couldn’t you?”

  “Well, I think—”

  “I want to know about the langoliers.”

  With some effort, Craig turned his head to look at them… and now Laurel felt some of the charm and force of personality which had kept Craig firmly on the fast track as he worked out the high-pressure script his parents had written for him. She felt this even though he was lying on the floor with his hands tied behind him and his own blood drying on his forehead and left cheek.

  “My father said the langoliers were little creatures that lived in closets and sewers and other dark places.”

  “Like elves?” Dinah wanted to know.

  Craig laughed and shook his head. “Nothing so pleasant, I’m afraid. He said that all they really were was hair and teeth and fast little legs—their little legs were fast, he said, so they could catch up with bad boys and girls no matter how quickly they scampered.”

  “Stop it,” Laurel said coldly. “You’re scaring the child.”

  “No, he’s not,” Dinah said. “I know make-believe when I hear it. It’s interesting, that’s all.” Her face said it was something more than interesting, however. She was intent, fascinated.

  “It is, isn’t it?” Craig said, apparently pleased by her interest. “I think what Laurel means is that I’m scaring her. Do I win the cigar, Laurel? If so, I’d like an El Producto, please. None of those cheap White Owls for me.” He laughed again.

  Laurel didn’t reply, and after a moment Craig resumed.

  “My dad said there were thousands of langoliers. He said there had to be, because there were millions of bad boys and girls scampering about the world. That’s how he always put it. My father never saw a child run in his entire life. They always scampered. I think he liked that word because it implies senseless, directionless, nonproductive motion. But the langoliers… they ran. They have purpose. In fact, you could say that the langoliers are purpose personified.”

  “What did the kids do that was so bad?” Dinah asked. “What did they do that was so bad the langoliers had to run after them?”

  “You know, I’m glad you asked that question,” Craig said. “Because when my father said someone was bad, Dinah, what he meant was lazy. A lazy person couldn’t be part of THE BIG PICTURE. No way. In my house, you were either part of THE BIG PICTURE or you were LYING DOWN ON THE JOB, and that was the worst kind of bad you could be. Throat-cutting was a venial sin compared to LYING DOWN ON THE JOB. He said that if you weren’t part of THE BIG PICTURE, the langoliers would come and take you out of the picture completely. He said you’d be in your bed one night and then you’d hear them coming… crunching and smacking their way toward you… and even if you tried to scamper off, they’d get you. Because of their fast little—”

  “That’s enough,” Laurel said. Her voice was flat and dry.

  “The sound is out there, though,” Craig said. His eyes regarded her brightly, almost roguishly. “You can’t deny that. The sound really is out th—”

  “Stop it or I’ll hit you with something myself.”

  “Okay,” Craig said. He rolled over on his back, grimaced, and then rolled further, onto his other side and away from them. “A man gets tired of being hit when he’s down and hog-tied.”

  Laurel’s face grew not just warm but hot this time. She bit her lip and said nothing. She felt like crying. How was she supposed to handle someone like this? How? First the man seemed as crazy as a bedbug, and then he seemed as sane as could be. And meanwhile, the whole world—Mr. Toomy’s BIG PICTURE—had gone to hell.

  “I bet you were scared of your dad, weren’t you, Mr. Toomy?”

  Craig looked back over his shoulder at Dinah, startled. He smiled again, but this smile was different. It was a rueful, hurt smile with no public relations in it. “This time you win the cigar, miss,” he said. “I was terrified of him.”

  “Is he dead?”

  “Yes.”

  “Was he LYING DOWN ON THE JOB? Did the langoliers get him?”

  Craig thought for a long time. He remembered being told that his father had had his heart attack while in his office. When his secretary buzzed him for his ten o’clock staff meeting and there was no answer, she had come in to find him dead on the carpet, eyes bulging, foam drying on his mouth.

  Did someone tell you that? he wondered suddenly. That his eyes were bugging out, that there was foam on his mouth? Did someone actually tell you that—Mother, perhaps, when she was drunk—or was it just wishful thinking?

  “Mr. Toomy? Did they?”

  “Yes,” Craig said thoughtfully. “I guess he was, and I guess they did.”

  “Mr. Toomy?”

  “What?”

  “I’m not the way you see me. I’m not ugly. None of us are.”

  He looked at her, startled. “How would you know how you look to me, little blind miss?”

  “You might be surprised,” Dinah said.

  Laurel turned toward her, suddenly more uneasy than ever… but of course there was nothing to see. Dinah’s dark glasses defeated curiosity.

  3

  The other passengers stood on the far side of the waiting room, listening to that low rattling sound and saying nothing. It seemed there was nothing left to say.

  “What do we do now?” Don asked. He seemed to have wilted inside his red lumberjack’s shirt. Albert thought the shirt itself had lost some of its cheerfully macho vibrancy.

  “I don’t know,” Brian said. He felt a horrible impotence toiling away in his belly. He looked out at the plane, which had been his plane for a little while, and was struck by its clean lines and smooth beauty. The Delta 727 sitting to its left at the jetway looked like a dowdy matron by comparison. It looks good to you because it’s never going to fly again, that’s all. It’s like glimpsing a beautiful woman for just a moment in the back seat of a limousine—she looks even more beautiful than she really is because you know she’s not yours, can never be yours.

  “How much fuel is left, Brian?” Nick asked suddenly. “Maybe the burn-rate isn’t the same over here. Maybe there’s more than you realize.”

  “All the gauges are in apple-pie working order,” Brian said. “When we landed, I had less than 600 pounds. To get back to where this happened, we’d need at least 50,000.”

  Bethany took out her cigarettes and offered the pack to Bob. He shook his head. She stuck one in her mouth, took out her matches, and struck one.

  It didn’t light.

  “Oh-oh,” she said.

  Albert glanced over. She struck the match again… and again… and again. There was nothing. She looked at him, frightened.

  “Here,” Albert said. “Let me.”

  He took the matches from her hand and tore another one loose. He struck it across the strip on the back. There was nothing.

  “Whatever it is, it seems to be catching,” Rudy Warwick observed.

  Bethany burst into tears, and Bob offered her his handkerchief.

  “Wait a minute,” Albert said, and struck the match again. This time it lit… but the flame was low, guttering, unenthusiastic. He applied it to the quivering tip of Bethany’s cigarette and a clear image suddenly filled his mind: a sign he had passed as he rode his ten-speed to Pasadena High School every day for the last three years. CAUTION, this sign said. TWO-WAY TRAFFIC AHEAD.

  What in the hell does that mean?

  He didn’t know… at least not yet. All he knew for sure was that some idea wanted out but was, at least for the time being, stuck in the gears.

  Albert shook the match out. It didn’t take much shaking.

  Bethany drew on her cigarette, then grimaced. “Blick! It tastes like a Carlton, or something.”

  “Blow smoke in my face,” Albert said.

  “What?”

  “You heard me. Blow some in my face.”

  She did as he asked, and Albert sniffed at the
smoke. Its former sweet fragrance was now muted. Whatever it is, it seems to be catching.

  CAUTION: TWO-WAY TRAFFIC AHEAD.

  “I’m going back to the restaurant,” Nick said. He looked depressed. “Yon Cassius has a lean and slippery feel. I don’t like leaving him with the ladies for too long.”

  Brian started after him and the others followed. Albert thought there was something a little amusing about these tidal flows—they were behaving like cows which sense thunder in the air.

  “Come on,” Bethany said. “Let’s go.” She dropped her half-smoked cigarette into an ashtray and used Bob’s handkerchief to wipe her eyes. Then she took Albert’s hand.

  They were halfway across the waiting room and Albert was looking at the back of Mr. Gaffney’s red shirt when it struck him again, more forcibly this time: TWO-WAY TRAFFIC AHEAD.

  “Wait a minute!” he yelled. He suddenly slipped an arm around Bethany’s waist, pulled her to him, put his face into the hollow of her throat, and breathed in deeply.

  “Oh my! We hardly know each other!” Bethany cried. Then she began to giggle helplessly and put her arms around Albert’s neck. Albert, a boy whose natural shyness usually disappeared only in his daydreams, paid no notice. He took another deep breath through his nose. The smells of her hair, sweat, and perfume were still there, but they were faint; very faint.

  They all looked around, but Albert had already let Bethany go and was hurrying back to the windows.

  “Wow!” Bethany said. She was still giggling a little, and blushing brightly. “Strange dude!”

  Albert looked at Flight 29 and saw what Brian had noticed a few minutes earlier: it was clean and smooth and almost impossibly white. It seemed to vibrate in the dull stillness outside.

  Suddenly the idea came up for him. It seemed to burst behind his eyes like a firework. The central concept was a bright, burning ball; implications radiated out from it like fiery spangles and for a moment he quite literally forgot to breathe.

  “Albert?” Bob asked. “Albert, what’s wro—”

  “Captain Engle!” Albert screamed. In the restaurant, Laurel sat bolt upright and Dinah clasped her arm with hands like talons. Craig Toomy craned his neck to look. “Captain Engle, come here!”

  4

  Outside, the sound was louder.

  To Brian it was the sound of radio static. Nick Hopewell thought it sounded like a strong wind rattling dry tropical grasses. Albert, who had worked at McDonald’s the summer before, was reminded of the sound of french fries in a deep-fat fryer, and to Bob Jenkins it was the sound of paper being crumpled in a distant room.

  The four of them crawled through the hanging rubber strips and then stepped down into the luggage-unloading area, listening to the sound of what Craig Toomy called the langoliers.

  “How much closer is it?” Brian asked Nick.

  “Can’t tell. It sounds closer, but of course we were inside before.”

  “Come on,” Albert said impatiently. “How do we get back aboard? Climb the slide?”

  “Won’t be necessary,” Brian said, and pointed. A rolling stairway stood on the far side of Gate 2. They walked toward it, their shoes clopping listlessly on the concrete.

  “You know what a long shot this is, don’t you, Albert?” Brian asked as they walked.

  “Yes, but—”

  “Long shots are better than no shots at all,” Nick finished for him.

  “I just don’t want him to be too disappointed if it doesn’t pan out.”

  “Don’t worry,” Bob said softly. “I will be disappointed enough for all of us. The lad’s idea makes good logical sense. It should prove out… although, Albert, you do realize there may be factors here which we haven’t discovered, don’t you?”

  “Yes.”

  They reached the rolling ladder, and Brian kicked up the foot-brakes on the wheels. Nick took a position on the grip which jutted from the left railing, and Brian laid hold of the one on the right.

  “I hope it still rolls,” Brian said.

  “It should,” Bob Jenkins answered. “Some—perhaps even most—of the ordinary physical and chemical components of life seem to remain in operation; our bodies are able to process the air, doors open and close—”

  “Don’t forget gravity,” Albert put in. “The earth still sucks.”

  “Let’s quit talking about it and just try it,” Nick said.

  The stairway rolled easily. The two men trundled it across the tarmac toward the 767 with Albert and Bob walking behind them. One of the wheels squeaked rhythmically. The only other sound was that low, constant crunch-rattle-crunch from somewhere over the eastern horizon.

  “Look at it,” Albert said as they neared the 767. “Just look at it. Can’t you see? Can’t you see how much more there it is than anything else?”

  There was no need to answer, and no one did. They could all see it. And reluctantly, almost against his will, Brian began to think the kid might have something.

  They set the stairway at an angle between the escape slide and the fuselage of the plane, with the top step only a long stride away from the open door. “I’ll go first,” Brian said. “After I pull the slide in, Nick, you and Albert roll the stairs into better position.”

  “Aye, aye, Captain,” Nick said, and clipped off a smart little salute, the knuckles of his first and second fingers touching his forehead.

  Brian snorted. “Junior attaché,” he said, and then ran fleetly up the stairs. A few moments later he had used the escape slide’s lanyard to pull it back inside. Then he leaned out to watch as Nick and Albert carefully maneuvered the rolling staircase into position with its top step just below the 767’s forward entrance.

  5

  Rudy Warwick and Don Gaffney were now babysitting Craig. Bethany, Dinah, and Laurel were lined up at the waiting-room windows, looking out. “What are they doing?” Dinah asked.

  “They’ve taken away the slide and put a stairway by the door,” Laurel said. “Now they’re going up.” She looked at Bethany. “You’re sure you don’t know what they’re up to?”

  Bethany shook her head. “All I know is that Ace—Albert, I mean—almost went nuts. I’d like to think it was this mad sexual attraction, but I don’t think it was.” She paused, smiled, and added: “At least, not yet. He said something about the plane being more there. And my perfume being less there, which probably wouldn’t please Coco Chanel or whatever her name is. And two-way traffic. I didn’t get it. He was really jabbering.”

  “I bet I know,” Dinah said.

  “What’s your guess, hon?”

  Dinah only shook her head. “I just hope they hurry up. Because poor Mr. Toomy is right. The langoliers are coming.”

  “Dinah, that’s just something his father made up.”

  “Maybe once it was make-believe,” Dinah said, turning her sightless eyes back to the windows, “but not anymore.”

  6

  “All right, Ace,” Nick said. “On with the show.”

  Albert’s heart was thudding and his hands shook as he set the four elements of his experiment out on the shelf in first class, where, a thousand years ago and on the other side of the continent, a woman named Melanie Trevor had supervised a carton of orange juice and two bottles of champagne.

  Brian watched closely as Albert put down a book of matches, a bottle of Budweiser, a can of Pepsi, and a peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwich from the restaurant cold-case. The sandwich had been sealed in plastic wrap.

  “Okay,” Albert said, and took a deep breath. “Let’s see what we got here.”

  7

  Don left the restaurant and walked over to the windows. “What’s happening?”

  “We don’t know,” Bethany said. She had managed to coax a flame from another of her matches and was smoking again. When she removed the cigarette from her mouth, Laurel saw she had torn off the filter. “They went inside the plane; they’re still inside the plane; end of story.”

  Don gazed out for several seconds. “It looks di
fferent outside. I can’t say just why, but it does.”

  “The light’s going,” Dinah said. “That’s what’s different.” Her voice was calm enough, but her small face was an imprint of loneliness and fear. “I can feel it going.”

  “She’s right,” Laurel agreed. “It’s only been daylight for two or three hours, but it’s already getting dark again.”

  “I keep thinking this is a dream, you know,” Don said. “I keep thinking it’s the worst nightmare I ever had but I’ll wake up soon.”

  Laurel nodded. “How is Mr. Toomy?”

  Don laughed without much humor. “You won’t believe it.”

  “Won’t believe what?” Bethany asked.

  “He’s gone to sleep.”

  8

  Craig Toomy, of course, was not sleeping. People who fell asleep at critical moments, like that fellow who was supposed to have been keeping an eye out while Jesus prayed in the Garden of Gethsemane, were most definitely not part of THE BIG PICTURE.

  He had watched the two men carefully through eyes which were not quite shut and willed one or both of them to go away. Eventually the one in the red shirt did go away. Warwick, the bald man with the big false teeth, walked over to Craig and bent down. Craig let his eyes close all the way.

  “Hey,” Warwick said. “Hey, you ’wake?”

  Craig lay still, eyes closed, breathing regularly. He considered manufacturing a small snore and thought better of it.

  Warwick poked him in the side.

  Craig kept his eyes shut and went on breathing regularly.

  Baldy straightened up, stepped over him, and went to the restaurant door to watch the others. Craig cracked his eyelids and made sure Warwick’s back was turned. Then, very quietly and very carefully, he began to work his wrists up and down inside the tight figure-eight of cloth which bound them. The tablecloth rope felt looser already.

  He moved his wrists in short strokes, watching Warwick’s back, ready to cease movement and close his eyes again the instant Warwick showed signs of turning around. He willed Warwick not to turn around. He wanted to be free before the assholes came back from the plane. Especially the English asshole, the one who had hurt his nose and then kicked him while he was down. The English asshole had tied him up pretty well; thank God it was only a tablecloth instead of a length of nylon line. Then he would have been out of luck, but as it was—

 

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