Nightmares and Dreamscapes Read online

Page 35


  She looked at Clark, noted his flushed cheeks and nearly nonexistent mouth, and decided it would be politic to keep her own mouth shut, at least for the time being. If she was quiet and nonaccusatory, he would be more likely to come to his senses before this miserable excuse for a road petered out in a gravel pit or quicksand bog.

  "Besides, I can't very well turn around," he said, as if she had suggested that very thing.

  "I can see that," she replied neutrally.

  He glanced at her, perhaps wanting to fight, perhaps just feeling embarrassed and hoping to see she wasn't too pissed at him--at least not yet--and then looked back through the windshield. Now there were weeds and grass growing up the center of this road, too, and the way was so narrow that if they did happen to meet another car, one of them would have to back up. Nor was that the end of the fun. The ground beyond the wheelruts looked increasingly untrustworthy; the scrubby trees seemed to be jostling each other for position in the wet ground.

  There were no power-poles on either side of the road. She almost pointed this out to Clark, then decided it might be smarter to hold her tongue about that, too. He drove on in silence until they came around a down-slanting curve. He was hoping against hope that they would see a change for the better on the far side, but the overgrown track only went on as it had before. It was, if anything, a little fainter and a little narrower, and had begun to remind Clark of roads in the fantasy epics he liked to read--stories by people like Terry Brooks, Stephen Donaldson, and, of course, J. R. R. Tolkien, the spiritual father of them all. In these tales, the characters (who usually had hairy feet and pointed ears) took these neglected roads in spite of their own gloomy intuitions, and usually ended up battling trolls or boggarts or mace-wielding skeletons.

  "Clark--"

  "I know," he said, and hammered the wheel suddenly with his left hand--a short, frustrated stroke that succeeded only in honking the horn. "I know." He stopped the Mercedes, which now straddled the entire road (road? hell, lane was now too grand a word for it), slammed the transmission into park, and got out. Mary got out on the other side, more slowly.

  The balsam smell of the trees was heavenly, and she thought there was something beautiful about the silence, unbroken as it was by the sound of any motor (even the far-off drone of an airplane) or human voice . . . but there was something spooky about it, as well. Even the sounds she could hear--the tu-whit! of a bird in the shadowy firs, the sough of the wind, the rough rumble of the Princess's diesel engine--served to emphasize the wall of quiet encircling them.

  She looked across the Princess's gray roof at Clark, and it was not reproach or anger in her gaze but appeal: Get us out of this, all right? Please?

  "Sorry, hon," he said, and the worry she saw in his face did nothing to soothe her. "Really."

  She tried to speak, but at first no sound came out of her dry throat. She cleared it and tried again. "What do you think about backing up, Clark?"

  He considered it for several moments--the tu-whit! bird had time to call again and be answered from somewhere deeper in the forest--before shaking his head. "Only as a last resort. It's at least two miles back to the last fork in the road--"

  "You mean there was another one?"

  He winced a little, dropped his eyes, and nodded. "Backing up . . . well, you see how narrow the road is, and how mucky the ditches are. If we went off . . ." He shook his head and sighed.

  "So we go on."

  "I think so. If the road goes entirely to hell, of course, I'll have to try it."

  "But by then we'll be in even deeper, won't we?" So far she was managing, and quite well, she thought, to keep a tone of accusation from creeping into her voice, but it was getting harder and harder to do. She was pissed at him, quite severely pissed, and pissed at herself, as well--for letting him get them into this in the first place, and then for coddling him the way she was now.

  "Yes, but I like the odds on finding a wide place up ahead better than I like the odds on reversing for a couple of miles along this piece of crap. If it turns out we do have to back out, I'll take it in stages--back up for five minutes, rest for ten, back up for five more." He smiled lamely. "It'll be an adventure."

  "Oh yes, it'll be that, all right," Mary said, thinking again that her definition for this sort of thing was not adventure but pain in the ass. "Are you sure you aren't pressing on because you believe in your heart that we're going to find Toketee Falls right over the next hill?"

  For a moment his mouth seemed to disappear entirely and she braced for an explosion of righteous male wrath. Then his shoulders sagged and he only shook his head. In that moment she saw what he was going to look like thirty years from now, and that frightened her a lot more than getting caught on a back road in the middle of nowhere.

  "No," he said. "I guess I've given up on Toketee Falls. One of the great rules of travel in America is that roads without electrical lines running along at least one side of them don't go anywhere."

  So he had noticed, too.

  "Come on," he said, getting back in. "I'm going to try like hell to get us out of this. And next time I'll listen to you."

  Yeah, yeah, Mary thought with a mixture of amusement and tired resentment. I've heard that one before. But before he could pull the transmission stick on the console down from park to drive, she put her hand over his. "I know you will," she said, turning what he'd said into a promise. "Now get us out of this mess."

  "Count on it," Clark said.

  "And be careful."

  "You can count on that, too." He gave her a small smile that made her feel a little better, then engaged the Princess's transmission. The big gray Mercedes, looking very out of place in these deep woods, began to creep down the shadowy track again.

  *

  They drove another mile by the odometer and nothing changed but the width of the cart-track they were on: it grew narrower still. Mary thought the scruffy firs now looked not like hungry guests at a banquet but morbidly curious spectators at the site of a nasty accident. If the track got any narrower, they would begin to hear the squall of branches along the sides of the car. The ground under the trees, meanwhile, had gone from mucky to swampy; Mary could see patches of standing water, dusty with pollen and fallen pine needles, in some of the dips. Her heart was beating much too fast, and twice she had caught herself gnawing at her nails, a habit she thought she had given up for good the year before she married Clark. She had begun to realize that if they got stuck now, they would almost certainly spend the night camped out in the Princess. And there were animals in these woods--she had heard them crashing around out there. Some of them sounded big enough to be bears. The thought of meeting a bear while they stood looking at their hopelessly mired Mercedes made her swallow something that felt and tasted like a large lintball.

  "Clark, I think we'd better give it up and try backing. It's already past three o'clock and--"

  "Look," he said, pointing ahead. "Is it a sign?"

  She squinted. Ahead, the lane rose toward the crest of a deeply wooded hill. There was a bright blue oblong standing near the top. "Yes," she said. "It's a sign, all right."

  "Great! Can you read it?"

  "Uh-huh--it says IF YOU CAME THIS FAR, YOU REALLY FUCKED UP."

  He shot her a complex look of amusement and irritation. "Very funny, Mare."

  "Thank you, Clark. I try."

  "We'll go to the top of the hill, read the sign, and see what's over the crest. If we don't see anything hopeful, we'll try backing. Agreed?"

  "Agreed."

  He patted her leg, then drove cautiously on. The Mercedes was moving so slowly now that they could hear the soft sound of the weeds on the crown of the road whickering against the undercarriage. Mary really could make out the words on the sign now, but at first she rejected them, thinking she had to be mistaken--it was just too crazy. But they drew closer still, and the words didn't change.

  "Does it say what I think it does?" Clark asked her.

  Mary gave a short, bewilder
ed laugh. "Sure . . . but it must be someone's idea of a joke. Don't you think?"

  "I've given up thinking--it keeps getting me into trouble. But I see something that isn't a joke. Look, Mary!"

  Twenty or thirty feet beyond the sign--just before the crest of the hill--the road widened dramatically and was once more both paved and lined. Mary felt worry roll off her heart like a boulder.

  Clark was grinning. "Isn't that beautiful?"

  She nodded happily, grinning herself.

  They reached the sign and Clark stopped. They read it again:

  Welcome to

  Rock and Roll Heaven, Ore.

  WE COOK WITH GAS! SO WILL YOU!

  Jaycees Chamber of Commerce Lions * Elks

  "It's got to be a joke," she repeated.

  "Maybe not."

  "A town called Rock and Roll Heaven? Puh-leeze, Clark."

  "Why not? There's Truth or Consequences, New Mexico, Dry Shark, Nevada, and a town in Pennsylvania called Intercourse. So why not a Rock and Roll Heaven in Oregon?"

  She laughed giddily. The sense of relief was really incredible. "You made that up."

  "What?"

  "Intercourse, Pennsylvania."

  "I didn't. Ralph Ginzberg once tried to send a magazine called Eros from there. For the postmark. The Feds wouldn't let him. Swear. And who knows? Maybe the town was founded by a bunch of communal back-to-the-land hippies in the sixties. They went establishment--Lions, Elks, Jaycees--but the original name stayed." He was quite taken with the idea; he found it both funny and oddly sweet. "Besides, I don't think it matters. What matters is we found some honest-to-God pavement again, honey. The stuff you drive on."

  She nodded. "So drive on it . . . but be careful."

  "You bet." The Princess nosed up onto the pavement, which was not asphalt but a smooth composition surface without a patch or expansion-joint to be seen. "Careful's my middle n--"

  Then they reached the crest of the hill and the last word died in his mouth. He stamped on the brake-pedal so hard that their seatbelts locked, then jammed the transmission lever back into park.

  "Holy wow!" Clark said.

  They sat in the idling Mercedes, open-mouthed, looking down at the town below.

  *

  It was a perfect jewel of a town nestled in a small, shallow valley like a dimple. Its resemblance to the paintings of Norman Rockwell and the small-town illustrations of Currier & Ives was, to Mary, at least, inescapable. She tried to tell herself it was just the geography; the way the road wound down into the valley, the way the town was surrounded by deep green-black forest--leagues of old, thick firs growing in unbroken profusion beyond the outlying fields--but it was more than the geography, and she supposed Clark knew it as well as she did. There was something too sweetly balanced about the church steeples, for instance--one on the north end of the town common and the other on the south end. The barn-red building off to the east had to be the school-house, and the big white one off to the west, the one with the bell-tower on top and the satellite dish to one side, had to be the town hall. The homes all looked impossibly neat and cozy, the sorts of domiciles you saw in the house-beautiful ads of pre-World War II magazines like The Saturday Evening Post and American Mercury.

  There should be smoke curling from a chimney or two, Mary thought, and after a little examination, she saw that there was. She suddenly found herself remembering a story from Ray Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles. "Mars Is Heaven," it had been called, and in it the Martians had cleverly disguised the slaughterhouse so it had looked like everybody's fondest hometown dream.

  "Turn around," she said abruptly. "It's wide enough here, if you're careful."

  He turned slowly to look at her, and she didn't care much for the expression on his face. He was eyeing her as if he thought she had gone crazy. "Honey, what are you--"

  "I don't like it, that's all." She could feel her face growing warm, but she pushed on in spite of the heat. "It makes me think of a scary story I read when I was a teenager." She paused. "It also makes me think of the candy-house in 'Hansel and Gretel.' "

  He went on giving her that patented I Just Don't Believe It stare of his, and she realized he meant to go down there--it was just another part of the same wretched testosterone blast that had gotten them off the main road in the first place. He wanted to explore, by Christ. And he wanted a souvenir, of course. A tee-shirt bought in the local drugstore would do, one that said something cute like I'VE BEEN TO ROCK AND ROLL HEAVEN AND YOU KNOW THEY GOT A HELL OF A BAND

  "Honey--" It was the soft, tender voice he used when he intended to jolly her into something or die trying.

  "Oh, stop. If you want to do something nice for me, turn us around and drive us back to Highway 58. If you do that, you can have some more sugar tonight. Another double helping, even, if you're up to it."

  He fetched a deep sigh, hands on the steering wheel, eyes straight ahead. At last, not looking at her, he said: "Look across the valley, Mary. Do you see the road going up the hill on the far side?"

  "Yes, I do."

  "Do you see how wide it is? How smooth? How nicely paved?"

  "Clark, that is hardly--"

  "Look! I believe I even see an honest-to-God bus on it." He pointed at a yellow bug trundling along the road toward town, its metal hide glittering hotly in the afternoon sunlight. "That's one more vehicle than we've seen on this side of the world."

  "I still--"

  He grabbed the map which had been lying on the console, and when he turned to her with it, Mary realized with dismay that the jolly, coaxing voice had temporarily concealed the fact that he was seriously pissed at her. "Listen, Mare, and pay attention, because there may be questions later. Maybe I can turn around here and maybe I can't--it's wider, but I'm not as sure as you are that it's wide enough. And the ground still looks pretty squelchy to me."

  "Clark, please don't yell at me. I'm getting a headache."

  He made an effort and moderated his voice. "If we do get turned around, it's twelve miles back to Highway 58, over the same shitty road we just travelled--"

  "Twelve miles isn't so much." She tried to sound firm, if only to herself, but she could feel herself weakening. She hated herself for it, but that didn't change it. She had a horrid suspicion that this was how men almost always got their way: not by being right but by being relentless. They argued like they played football, and if you hung in there, you almost always finished the discussion with cleat-marks all over your psyche.

  "No, twelve miles isn't so much," he was saying in his most sweetly reasonable I-am-trying-not-to-strangle-you-Mary voice, "but what about the fifty or so we'll have to tack on going around this patch of woods once we get back on 58?"

  "You make it sound as if we had a train to catch, Clark!"

  "It just pisses me off, that's all. You take one look down at a nice little town with a cute little name and say it reminds you of Friday the 13th, Part XX or some damn thing and you want to go back. And that road over there"--he pointed across the valley--"heads due south. It's probably less than half an hour from here to Toketee Falls by that road."

  "That's about what you said back in Oakridge--before we started off on the Magical Mystery Tour segment of our trip."

  He looked at her a moment longer, his mouth tucked in on itself like a cramp, then grabbed the transmission lever. "Fuck it," he snarled. "We'll go back. But if we meet one car on the way, Mary, just one, we'll end up backing into Rock and Roll Heaven. So--"

  She put her hand over his before he could disengage the transmission for the second time that day.

  "Go on," she said. "You're probably right and I'm probably being silly." Rolling over like this has got to be bred in the goddam bone, she thought. Either that, or I'm just too tired to fight.

  She took her hand away, but he paused a moment longer, looking at her. "Only if you're sure," he said.

  And that was really the most ludicrous thing of all, wasn't it? Winning wasn't enough for a man like Clark; the vote also had
to be unanimous. She had voiced that unanimity many times when she didn't feel very unanimous in her heart, but she discovered that she just wasn't capable of it this time.

  "But I'm not sure," she said. "If you'd been listening to me instead of just putting up with me, you'd know that. Probably you're right and probably I'm just being silly--your take on it makes more sense than mine does, I admit that much, at least, and I'm willing to soldier along--but that doesn't change the way I feel. So you'll just have to excuse me if I decline to put on my little cheerleader's skirt and lead the Go Clark Go cheer this time."

  "Jesus!" he said. His face was wearing an uncertain expression that made him look uncharacteristically--and somehow hatefully--boyish. "You're in some mood, aren't you, honeybunch?"

  "I guess I am," she said, hoping he couldn't see how much that particular term of endearment grated on her. She was thirty-two, after all, and he was almost forty-one. She felt a little too old to be anyone's honeybunch and thought Clark was a little too old to need one.

  Then the troubled look on his face cleared and the Clark she liked--the one she really believed she could spend the second half of her life with--was back. "You'd look cute in a cheerleader's skirt, though," he said, and appeared to measure the length of her thigh. "You would."

  "You're a fool, Clark," she said, and then found herself smiling at him almost in spite of herself.

  "That's correct, ma'am," he said, and put the Princess in gear.

  *

  The town had no outskirts, unless the few fields which surrounded it counted. At one moment they were driving down a gloomy, tree-shaded lane; at the next there were broad tan fields on either side of the car; at the next they were passing neat little houses.

  The town was quiet but far from deserted. A few cars moved lazily back and forth on the four or five intersecting streets that made up downtown, and a handful of pedestrians strolled the sidewalks. Clark lifted a hand in salute to a bare-chested, potbellied man who was simultaneously watering his lawn and drinking a can of Olympia. The potbellied man, whose dirty hair straggled to his shoulders, watched them go by but did not raise his own hand in return.

  Main Street had that same Norman Rockwell ambience, and here it was so strong that it was almost a feeling of deja vu. The walks were shaded by robust, mature oaks, and that was somehow just right. You didn't have to see the town's only watering hole to know that it would be called The Dew Drop Inn and that there would be a lighted clock displaying the Budweiser Clydesdales over the bar. The parking spaces were the slanting type; there was a red-white-and-blue barber pole turning outside The Cutting Edge; a mortar and pestle hung over the door of the local pharmacy, which was called The Tuneful Druggist. The pet shop (with a sign in the window saying WE HAVE SIAMESE IF YOU PLEASE) was called White Rabbit. Everything was so right you could just shit. Most right of all was the town common at the center of town. There was a sign hung on a guy-wire above the bandshell, and Mary could read it easily, although they were a hundred yards away. CONCERT TONIGHT, it said.

 

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