But that's wrong, he thought. All wrong. She never had roses in the house-she was allergic to most blooms, and roses were the worst.
She used to sneeze like crazy when she was around them.
The only thing I ever saw her put on the dining-room table was Indian Bouquet, and that wasn't anything but autumn grasses. I see roses becauseHe looked back at the creature in the rocking chair, at red fingers which had now melted together into appendages that looked almost like fins. He regarded the scarlet mass which lay in the creature's lap, and the scar along his arm began to tingle again.
What in God's name is going on here?
But he knew, of course; he only had to look from the red thing in the rocking chair to the picture hanging on the wall, the picture of the scarlet-faced, malevolent Jesus watching the family eat their supper, to confirm it. He was not in his old house in Mary Mead, and he was not precisely in an aircraft over Derry, either.
He was in the Court of the Crimson King.
Part III THE CRIMSON KING CHAPTER 29
Without thinking about why he was doing it, Ralph slipped a hand into his sweater pocket and loosely cupped one of Lois's earrings.
His hand felt far away, something which belonged to someone else.
He was realizing an interesting thing: he had never been frightened in his life until now. Not once. He had thought he'd been frightened, of course, but it had been an illusion-the only time he'd even come close had been in the Derry Public Library, when Charlie Pickering stuck a knife into his armpit and said he was going to let Ralph's guts out all over the floor. That, however, was nothing but a mild moment of discomfort next to what he was feeling now.
A green man came... He felt good, but I could be wrong.
He hoped she wasn't; he most sincerely hoped she wasn't. Because the green man was about all he had left now.
The green man, and Lois's earrings.
[Ralph." Stop ivoolgathering. Look at your mother when she's talking to you." Seventy years old and you still act like you were sixteen, with a bad case of pecker-rash."
He turned back to the red-finned thing slumped in the rocker. It now bore only a passing resemblance to his late mother.
["You're not my mother, and I'm still in the airplane.
[You're not, boy. Don't make the mistake of thinking you are.
Take one step out of my kitchen and you're in for a very long fall.
["You might as well stop now. I can see what you are."] The thing spoke in a bubbly, choked voice that turned Ralph's spine to a narrow line of ice.
[You don't. You may think you do, hut you don't. And you don't want to. You don't ever want to see me with my disguises laid aside.
Believe me, Ralph, you don't.] He realized with mounting horror that the mother-thing had turned into an enormous female catfish, a hungry bottom-feeder with stubby teeth gleaming between its pendulous lips and whiskers which dangled almost to the collar of the dress it still wore.
The gills in its neck opened and closed like razor-cuts,"revealing troubled red inner flesh. Its eyes had grown round and purplish, and as Ralph watched, the sockets began to slide away from each other. This continued until the eyes bulged from the sides rather than the front of the creature's scaly face.
[Don't move so much as a single muscle, Ralph. You'll probably die in the explosion no matter what level you're on-the shockwaves travel here just as they do in any building-but that death will still be a great deal better than my death.] The catfish opened its mouth.
Its teeth ringed a blood-colored maw which looked full of strange guts and tumors. It seemed to be laughing at him.
["Who are you? Are you the Crimson King?"
[That's Ed's name for me-we ought to have our own, don't you think? Lets see. If you don't want me to be Mom Roberts, why not call me the Kingfish? You remember the Kingfish from the radio, don't you?] Yes, of course he did... but the real Kingfish had never been on Amos in' Andy, and it hadn't really been a kingfish at all. The real Kingfish had been a queenfish, and it had lived in the Barrens.
On a summer's day during the year when Ralph Roberts was seven, He had hooked an enormous catfish out of the Kenduskeag while fishing with his