its lowest level ever - a dim and watery green the color of stagnant pond-water.
Gardener looked cautiously toward Anne, afraid of those blazing eyes. But there was nothing to be afraid of. She only floated, head bent forward as if in deep thought, her hair trailing upward.
She's dead, son. If you're going to get the boy, it has to be now. I don't know how long I can provide the power. And I can't be divided, with half of myself looking out for them and half running the transformer.
He stared out at Gardener, and Gard felt deep pity ... and admiration for the old bastard's brute courage. Could he have done half as much, gone half as far, if their positions had been reversed? He doubted it.
You're in a lot of pain, aren't you?
I ain't exactly feeling in the pink, son, if that's what you mean. But I'll get through it ... if you get going, that is.
Get going. Yes. He had dilly-dallied too long, far too long.
His mouth popped open in another wrenching yawn, and then he stepped toward the equipment in and around that orange crate - what the old man called the transformer.
PROGRAM?
the keyless computer screen beckoned.
Hillman could have told Gardener what to do, but Gardener didn't need to be told. He knew. He also remembered the nosebleed and the blast of sound he'd taken as a result of his single experiment with Moss's levitation gadget. This made that thing look like a box of Lincoln Logs. Still, he had gone quite a ways down the path to 'becoming' himself since then, like it or not. He would just have to hope it was enou
Oh shit, son, hold the phone, we got company
Then a louder voice overrode Hillman's, a voice Gard vaguely recognized but could not put a name to.
(BACK OFF BACK OFF HOLD ON ALL OF YOU)
Just 1 think just one or maybe two
That was the old man's exhausted mental voice again. Gardener felt his concentration go out to the whirligig in the dooryard. In the shed, the light began to grow bright once more, and the killing pulses began.
15
Dick Allison and Newt Berringer were still two miles from Bobbi's place when Freeman Moss's mental shrieks began. Moments before, they had swerved past Elt Barker. Now Dick looked up into the rearview mirror and saw Elt's Harley swerve across the road and go leaping through the air. For a moment Elt looked like Evel Knievel, white hair or no. Then he separated from the bike and landed in the scrub.
Newt hit the brakes with both feet and his truck screamed to a stop in the middle of the road. He looked at Dick with large eyes that were both frightened and furious.
Son of a bitch has got a gadget!
Yeah. Fire. Some kind of
Abruptly Dick raised his mental voice to a shout. Newt picked it up, amplified it. From Kyle Archinbourg's Cadillac, Kyle and Hazel McCready joined in.
(BACK OFF BACK OFF HOLD ON ALL OF YOU)
They stopped, holding their positions. They were not great takers of orders as a rule, these Tommyknockers, but Moss's hideous screams, fading now, were great persuaders. All stopped, that was, except for a blue Oldsmobile Delta 88 with a bumper-sticker on the back reading REALTORS SELL IT BY THE ACRE.
When the command came to back off and hold position, Andy Bozeman was already in sight of the Anderson place. His hate had grown exponentially - Gardener lying bleeding and dead was all he could think of. He came slewing into Bobbi's driveway in a wild power turn. The Olds's rear end broke free when Bozeman stamped the brake; the big car nearly tipped over.
I'll whitewash your fence, you fucking asshole - I'll give you a dead rat and a string to swing it on, oh you bastard.
His wife pulled the molecule-exciter out of her purse. It looked like a Buck Rogers blaster which had been created by a fairly bright lunatic. Its frame had once been part of a garden tool marketed under the trade name of Weed Eater. She leaned out the car window and pulled the trigger utterly at random. The east end of Bobbi's farmhouse exploded into a caldron of fire. Ida Bozeman grinned a cheerful, reptilian grin.
As the Bozemans began to get out of the Olds, the whirligig started to spin. A moment later the green parasol of flame began to form. Ida Bozeman tried to aim what she called her 'molecule disco' at it, but too late.