seconds: âLetâs talk about it,son, right?â And then she sees fire bloom from the gunâs nickel-plated muzzle in an uneven yellow-white corsage. She hears a popâstupid, insignificant, the sound of someone breaking a paper lunchsack with the palm of his hand. She sees Dashmiel, that southern-fried chickenshit, go jackrabbitting off to his immediate left. She sees Scott buck backward on his heels. At the same time his chin thrusts forward. The combination is weird and graceful, like a dance-floor move. A black hole blinks open on the right side of his summer sportcoat. âSon, you honest-to-God donât want to do that,â he says in his drawling Lisey-time voice, and even in Lisey-time she can hear how his voice grows thinner on every word until he sounds like a test pilot in a high-altitude chamber. Yet Lisey thinks he still doesnât know heâs been shot. Sheâs almost positive. His sportcoat swings open like a gate as he puts his hand out in a commanding stop-this gesture, and she realizes two things simultaneously. The first is that the shirt inside his coat is turning red. The second is that she has at last broken into some semblance of a run.
âI got to end all this ding-dong,â says Gerd Allen Cole with perfect fretful clarity. âI got to end all this ding-dong for the freesias.â And Lisey is suddenly sure that once Scott is dead, once the damage is done, Blondie will either kill himself or pretend to try. For the time being, however, he has this business to finish. The business of the writer. Blondie turns his wrist slightly so that the smoking barrel of the Lady-smith .22 points at the left side of Scottâs chest; in Lisey-time the move is smooth and slow. He has done the lung; now heâll do the heart. Lisey knows she canât allow that to happen. If her husband is to have any chance at all, this lethal goofball mustnât be allowed to put any more lead into him.
As if repudiating her, Gerd Allen Cole says, âIt never ends until you go down. Youâre responsible for all these repetitions, old boy. You are hell, you are a monkey, and now you are my monkey!â
This speech is the closest he comes to making sense, and making it gives Lisey just enough time to first wind up with the silver spadeâthe body knows its business and her hands have already found their position near the top of the thingâs forty-inch handleâand then swing it. Still, itâs close. If it had been a horse race, the tote-board would undoubtedlyhave flashed the HOLD TICKETS WAIT FOR PHOTO message. But when the race is between a man with a gun and a woman with a shovel, you donât need a photo. In slowed-down Lisey-time she sees the silver scoop strike the gun, driving it upward just as that corsage of fire blooms again (she can see only part of it this time, and the muzzle is completely hidden by the blade of the spade). She sees the business-end of the ceremonial shovel carry on forward and upward as the second shot goes harmlessly into the hot August sky. She sees the gun fly loose, and thereâs time to think Holy smuck! I really put a charge into this one! before the spade connects with Blondieâs face. His hand is still in there (three of those long slim fingers will be broken), but the spadeâs silver bowl connects solidly just the same, breaking Coleâs nose, shattering his right cheekbone and the bony orbit around his staring right eye, shattering nine teeth as well. A Mafia goon with a set of brass knuckles couldnât have done better.
And nowâstill slow, still in Lisey-timeâthe elements of Stefan Queenslandâs award-winning photograph are assembling themselves.
Captain S. Heffernan has seen whatâs happening only a second or two after Lisey, but he also has to deal with the bystander problemâin his case a fat bepimpled fella wearing baggy Bermuda shorts and a tee-shirt with Scott Landonâs
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