| Information (tilde.town/~mozz/index) | |
| All You Love Will Be Carried Away | |
| By Steven King | |
| (part 5 of 7) | |
| After the beep he said, "Hi, it's me. I'm in Lincoln. It's | |
| snowing. Remember the casserole you were going to take over | |
| to my mother. She'll be expecting it. And she asked for the | |
| Red Ball coupons. I know you think she's crazy on that | |
| subject, but humor her, O.K.? She's old. Tell Carlene Daddy | |
| says hi." He paused, then for the first time in about five | |
| years added, "I love you." | |
| He hung up, thought about another cigarette_-no worries | |
| about lung cancer, not now__and decided against it. He put | |
| the notebook, open to the last page, beside the telephone. | |
| He picked up the gun and rolled out the cylinder. Fully | |
| loaded. He snapped the cylinder back in with a flick of his | |
| wrist, then slipped the short barrel into his mouth. It | |
| tasted of oil and metal. He thought, Here I SIT, about to | |
| COOL it, my plan to EAT a fuckin'BOOL-it. He grinned around | |
| the barrel. That was terrible. He never would have written | |
| that down in his book | |
| Then another thought occurred to him and he put the gun back | |
| in its trench on the pillow, drew the phone to him again, | |
| and once more dialed home. He waited for his voice to recite | |
| the useless cell_phone number, then said, "Me again. Don't | |
| forget Rambo's appointment at the vet day after tomorrow, | |
| O.K.? Also the sea_jerky strips at night. They really do | |
| help his hips. Bye." | |
| He hung up and raised the gun again. Before he could put the | |
| barrel in his mouth, his eye fell on the notebook. He | |
| frowned and put the gun down. The book was open to the last | |
| four entries. The first thing anyone responding to the shot | |
| would see would be his dead body, sprawled across the bed | |
| closest to the bathroom, his head hanging down and bleeding | |
| on the nubbly green rug. The second thing, however, would be | |
| the Spiral notebook, open to the final written page. | |
| Alfie imagined some cop, some Nebraska state trooper who | |
| would never be written about on any bathroom wall due to | |
| the disciplines of scansion, reading those final entries, | |
| perhaps turning the battered old notebook toward him | |
| with the tip of his own pen. He would read the first | |
| three entries__"Trojan Gum," "Poopie doopie," "Save Russian | |
| Jews"-_and dismiss them as insanity. He would read the last | |
| line, "All that you love will be carried away," and decide | |
| that the dead guy had regained a little rationality at the | |
| end, just enough to write a halfway sensible suicide note. | |
| Alfie didn't like the idea of people thinking he was | |
| crazy (further examination of the book, which contained | |
| such information as "Medgar Evers is alive and well in | |
| Disneyland," would only confirm that impression). He was not | |
| crazy, and the things he had written here over the years | |
| weren't crazy, either. He was convinced of it. And if he was | |
| wrong, if these were the rantings of lunatics, they needed | |
| to be examined even more closely. That thing about don't | |
| look up here, you're pissing on your shoes, for instance, | |
| was that humor? Or a growl of rage? | |
| He considered using the john to get rid of the notebook, | |
| then shook his head. He'd end up on his knees with his | |
| shirtsleeves rolled back, fishing around in there, trying to | |
| get the damn thing back out. While the fan rattled and the | |
| fluorescent buzzed. And although immersion might blur some | |
| of the ink, it wouldn't blur all of it. Not enough. Besides, | |
| the notebook had been with him so long, riding in his pocket | |
| across so many flat and empty Midwest miles. He hated the | |
| idea of just flushing it away. | |
| The last page, then? Surely one page, balled up, would go | |
| down. But that would leave the rest for them (there was | |
| always a them) to discover, all that clear evidence of an | |
| unsound mind. They'd say, "Lucky he didn't decide to visit a | |
| schoolyard with an AK_47. Take a bunch of little kids with | |
| him." And it would follow Maura like a tin can tied to a | |
| dog's tail. "Did you hear about her husband?" they'd ask | |
| each other in the supermarket. "Killed himself in a motel. | |
| Left a book full of crazy stuff. Lucky he didn't kill her." | |
| Well, he could afford to be a little hard about that. Maura | |
| was an adult, after all. Carlene, on the other hand ... | |
| Carlene was ... | |
| Alfie looked at his watch. At her j.-v. basketball game, | |
| that's where Carlene was right now. Her teammates would say | |
| most of the same things the supermarket ladies would say, | |
| only within earshot and accompanied by those chilling | |
| seventh-grade giggles. Eyes full of glee and horror. Was | |
| that fair? No, of course not, but there was nothing fair | |
| about what had happened to him, either. Sometimes when you | |
| were cruising along the highway, you saw big curls of | |
| rubber that had unwound from the recap tires some of the | |
| independent truckers used. That was what he felt like now: | |
| thrown tread. The pills made it worse. They cleared your | |
| mind just enough for you to see what a colossal jam you were | |
| in. | |
| "But I'm not crazy," he said. "That doesn't make me crazy." | |
| No. Crazy might actually be better. | |
| All You Love Will Be Carried Away (Part 6 of 7) | |
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