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Underpromise; overdeliver.

Zodijak Gemini
Pol Muškarac
Poruke Odustao od brojanja
Zastava 44°49′N - 20°29′E
mob
Apple iPhone 6s
5

   We got his body down the twelve stairs and onto the gurney all right. My nightmare was that his cooked flesh might slough right off his bones as we lugged him—it was Old Toot's done tom turkey that had gotten into my head—but of course that didn't happen.
   Curtis Anderson was upstairs soothing the spectators—trying to, anyway—and that was good for Brutal, because Anderson wasn't there to see when Brutal took a step toward the head of the gurney and pulled his arm back to slug Percy, who was standing there looking stunned. I caught his arm, and that was good for both of them. It was good for Percy because Brutal meant to deliver a blow of near-decapitory force, and good for Brutal because he would have lost his job if the blow had connected, and maybe ended up in prison himself.
   'No,' I said.
   'What do you mean, no?' he asked me furiously. 'How can you say no? You saw what he did! What are you telling me? That you're still going to let his connections protect him? After what he did?'
   Brutal stared at me, mouth agape, eyes so angry they were watering.
   'Listen to me, Brutus—you take a poke at him, and most likely we all go. You, me, Dean, Harry, maybe even Jack Van Hay. Everyone else moves a rung or two up the ladder, starting with Bill Dodge, and the Prison Commission hires three or four Breadline Barneys to fill the spots at the bottom. Maybe you can live with that, but—' I cocked my thumb at Dean, who was staring down the dripping, brick-lined tunnel. He was holding his specs in one hand, and looked almost as dazed as Percy. 'But what about Dean? He's got two kids, one in high school and one just about to go.'
   'So what's it come down to?' Brutal asked. 'We let him get away with it?'
   'I didn't know the sponge was supposed to be wet,' Percy said in a faint, mechanical voice. This was the story he had rehearsed beforehand, of course, when he was expecting a painful prank instead of the cataclysm we had just witnessed. 'It was never wet when we rehearsed.'
   'Aw, you sucker—' Brutal began, and started for Percy. I grabbed him again and yanked him back. Footsteps clacked on the steps. I looked up, desperately afraid of seeing Curtis Anderson, but it was Harry Terwilliger. His cheeks were paper-white and his lips were purplish, as if he'd been eating blackberry cobbler.
   I switched my attention back to Brutal. 'For God's sake, Brutal, Delacroix's dead, nothing can change that, and Percy's not worth it.' Was the plan, or the beginnings of it, in my head even then? I've wondered about that since, let me tell you. I've wondered over the course of a lot of years, and have never been able to come up with a satisfactory answer. I suppose it doesn't matter much. A lot of things don't matter, but it doesn't keep a man from wondering about them, I've noticed.
   'You guys talk about me like I was a chump,' Percy said. He still sounded dazed and winded—as if someone had punched him deep in the gut—but he was coming back a little.
   'You are a chump, Percy,' I said.
   'Hey, you can't—'
   I controlled my own urge to hit him only with the greatest effort. Water dripped hollowly from the bricks down in the tunnel; our shadows danced huge and misshapen on the walls, like shadows in that Poe story about the big ape in the Rue Morgue. Thunder bashed, but down here it was muffled.
   'I only want to hear one thing from you, Percy, and that's you repeating your promise to put in for Briar Ridge tomorrow.'
   'Don't worry about that,' he said sullenly. He looked at the sheeted figure on the gurney, looked away, flicked his eyes up toward my face for a moment, then looked away again.
   'That would be for the best,' Harry said. 'Otherwise, you might get to know Wild Bill Wharton a whole lot better than you want to.' A slight pause. 'We could see to it.'
   Percy was afraid of us, and he was probably afraid of what we might do if he was still around when we found out he'd been talking to Jack Van Hay about what the sponge was for and why we always soaked it in brine, but Harry's mention of Wharton woke real terror in his eyes. I could see him remembering how Wharton had held him, ruffling his hair and crooning to him.
   'You wouldn't dare,' Percy whispered.
   'Yes I would,' Harry replied calmly. 'And do you know what? I'd get away with it. Because you've already shown yourself to be careless as hell around the prisoners. Incompetent, too.'
   Percy's fists bunched and his cheeks colored in a thin pink. 'I am not—'
   'Sure you are,' Dean said, joining us. We formed a rough semicircle around Percy at the foot of the stairs, and even a retreat up the tunnel was blocked; the gurney was behind him, with its load of smoking flesh hidden under an old sheet. 'You just burned Delacroix alive. If that ain't incompetent, what is?'
   Percy's eyes flickered. He had been planning to cover himself by pleading ignorance, and now he saw he was hoist by his own petard. I don't know what he might have said next, because Curtis Anderson came lunging down the stairs just then.
   We heard him and drew back from Percy a little, so as not to look quite so threatening.
   'What in the blue fuck was that all about? Anderson roared. 'Jesus Christ, there's puke all over the floor up there! And the smell! I got Magnusson and Old Toot-Toot to open both doors, but that smell won't come out for five damn years, that's what I'm betting. And that asshole Wharton is singing about it! I can hear him!'
   'Can he carry a tune, Curt?' Brutal asked. You know how you can bum off illuminating gas with a single spark and not be hurt if you do it before the concentration gets too heavy? This was like that. We took an instant to gape at Brutus, and then we were all howling. Our high, hysterical laughter flapped up and down the gloomy tunnel like bats. Our shadows bobbed and flickered on the walls. Near the end, even Percy joined in. At last it died, and in its aftermath we all felt a little better. Felt sane again.
   'Okay, boys,' Anderson said, mopping at his teary eyes with his handkerchief and still snorting out an occasional hiccup of laughter, 'what the hell happened?'
   'An execution,' Brutal said. I think his even tone surprised Anderson, but it didn't surprise me, at least not much; Brutal had always been good at turning down his dials in a hurry. 'A successful one.'
   'How in the name of Christ can you call a direct-current abortion like that a success? We've got witnesses that won't sleep for a month! Hell, that fat old broad probably won't sleep for a year!'
   Brutal pointed at the gurney, and the shape under the sheet. 'He's dead, ain't he? As for your witnesses, most of them will be telling their friends tomorrow night that it was poetic justice—Del there burned a bunch of people alive, so we turned around and burned him alive. Except they won't say it was us. They'll say it was the will of God, working through us. Maybe there's even some truth to that. And you want to know the best part? The absolute cat's pajamas? Most of their friends will wish they'd been here to see it.' He gave Percy a look both distasteful and sardonic as he said this last.
   'And if their feathers are a little ruffled, so what?' Harry asked. 'They volunteered for the damn job, nobody drafted them.'
   'I didn't know the sponge was supposed to be wet,' Percy said in his robot's voice. 'It's never wet in rehearsal.'
   Dean looked at him with utter disgust. 'How many years did you spend pissing on the toilet seat before someone told you to put it up before you start?' he snarled.
   Percy opened his mouth to reply, but I told him to shut up. For a wonder, he did. I turned to Anderson.
   'Percy fucked up, Curtis—that's what happened, pure and simple.' I turned toward Percy, daring him to contradict me. He didn't, maybe because he read my eyes: better that Anderson hear stupid mistake than on purpose. And besides, whatever was said down here in the tunnel didn't matter. What mattered, what always matters to the Percy Wetmores of the world, is what gets written down or overheard by the big bugs—the people who matter. What matters to the Percys of the world is how it plays in the newspapers.
   Anderson looked at the five of us uncertainly. He even looked at Del, but Del wasn't talking. 'I guess it could be worse,' Anderson said.
   'That's right,' I agreed. 'He could still be alive.'
   Curtis blinked—that possibility seemed not to have crossed his mind. 'I want a complete report about this on my desk tomorrow,' he said. 'And none of you are going to talk to Warden Moores about it until I've had my chance. Are you?'
   We shook our heads vehemently. If Curtis Anderson wanted to tell the warden, why, that was fine by us.
   'If none of those asshole scribblers put it in their papers—'
   'They won't,' I said. 'If they tried, their editors'd kill it. Too gruesome for a family audience. But they won't even try—they were all vets tonight. Sometimes things go wrong, that's all. They know it as well as we do.'
   Anderson considered a moment longer, then nodded. He turned his attention to Percy, an expression of disgust on his usually pleasant face. 'You're a little asshole,' he said, 'and I don't like you a bit.' He nodded at Percy's look of flabbergasted surprise. 'If you tell any of your candy-ass friends I said that, I'll deny it until Aunt Rhody's old gray goose comes back to life, and these men will back me up. You've got a problem, son.'
   He turned and started up the stairs. I let him get four steps and then said: 'Curtis?'
   He turned back, eyebrows raised, saying nothing.
   'You don't want to worry too much about Percy,' I said. 'He's moving on to Briar Ridge soon. Bigger and better things. Isn't that right, Percy?'
   'As soon as his transfer comes through,' Brutal added.
   'And until it comes, he's going to call in sick every night,' Dean put in.
   That roused Percy, who hadn't been working at the prison long enough to have accumulated any paid sick-time. He looked at Dean with bright distaste. 'Don't you wish,' he said.
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Zodijak Gemini
Pol Muškarac
Poruke Odustao od brojanja
Zastava 44°49′N - 20°29′E
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Apple iPhone 6s
6

   We were back on the block by one-fifteen or so (except for Percy, who had been ordered to clean up the storage room and was sulking his way through the job), me with a report to write. I decided to do it at the duty desk; if I sat in my more comfortable office chair, I'd likely doze off. That probably sounds peculiar to you, given what had happened only an hour before' but I felt as if I'd lived three lifetimes since eleven o'clock the previous night, all of them without sleep.
   John Coffey was standing at his cell door, tears streaming from his strange, distant eyes—it was like watching blood run out of some unhealable but strangely painless wound. Closer to the desk, Wharton was sitting on his bunk, rocking from side to side, and singing a song apparently of his own invention, and not quite nonsense. As well as I can remember, it went something like this:

   'Bar-be-cue! Me and you! Stinky, pinky, phew-phew-phew! It wasn't Billy or Philadelphia Philly, it wasn't Jackie or Roy! It was a warm little number, a hot cucumber, by the name of Delacroix!'

   'Shut up, you jerk,' I said.
   Wharton grinned, showing his mouthful of dingy teeth. He wasn't dying, at least not yet; he was up, happy, practically tap-dancing. 'Come on in here and make me, why don't you?' he said happily, and then began another verse of 'The Barbecue Song,' making up words not quite at random. There was something going on in there, all right. A kind of green and stinking intelligence that was, in its own way, almost brilliant.
   I went down to John Coffey. He wiped away his tears with the heels of his hands. His eyes were red and sore-looking, and it came to me that he was exhausted, too. Why he should have been, a man who trudged around the exercise yard maybe two hours a day and either sat or laid down in his cell the rest of the time, I didn't know, but I didn't doubt what I was seeing. It was too clear.
   'Poor Del,' he said in a low, hoarse voice. 'Poor old Del.'
   'Yes,' I said. 'Poor old Del. John, are you okay?'
   'He's out of it,' Coffey said. 'Del's out of it. Isn't he, boss?'
   'Yes. Answer my question, John. Are you okay?'
   'Del's out of it, he's the lucky one. No matter how it happened, he's the lucky one.'
   I thought Delacroix might have given him an argument on that, but didn't say so. I glanced around Coffey's cell, instead. 'Where's Mr. Jingles?'
   'Ran down there.' He pointed through the bars, down the hall to the restraint-room door.
   I nodded. 'Well, he'll be back.'
   But he wasn't; Mr. Jingles's days on the Green Mile were over. The only trace of him we ever happened on was what Brutal found that winter: a few brightly colored splinters of wood, and a smell of peppermint candy wafting out of a hole in a beam.
   I meant to walk away then, but I didn't. I looked at John Coffey, and he back at me as if he knew everything I was thinking. I told myself to get moving, to just call it a night and get moving, back to the duty desk and my report. Instead I said his name: 'John Coffey.'
   'Yes, boss,' he said at once.
   Sometimes a man is cursed with needing to know a thing, and that was how it was with me right then. I dropped down on one knee and began taking off one of my shoes
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Zodijak Gemini
Pol Muškarac
Poruke Odustao od brojanja
Zastava 44°49′N - 20°29′E
mob
Apple iPhone 6s
7

   The rain had quit by the time I got home, and a late grin of moon had appeared over the ridges to the north. My sleepiness seemed to have gone with the clouds. I was wide awake, and I could smell Delacroix on me. I thought I might smell him on my skin—barbecue, me and you, stinky, pinky, phew-phew-phew—for a long time to come.
   Janice was waiting up, as she always did on execution nights. I meant not to tell her the story, saw no sense in harrowing her with it, but she got a clear look at my face as I came in the kitchen door and would have it all. So I sat down, took her warm hands in my cold ones (the heater in my old Ford barely worked, and the weather had turned a hundred and eighty degrees since the storm), and told her what she thought she wanted to hear. About halfway through I broke down crying, which I hadn't expected. I was a little ashamed, but only a little; it was her, you see, and she never taxed me with the times that I slipped from the way I thought a man should be... the way I thought I should be, at any rate. A man with a good wife is the luckiest of God's creatures, and one without must be among the most miserable, I think, the only true blessing of their lives that they don't know how poorly off they are. I cried, and she held my head against her breast, and when my own storm passed, I felt better... a little, anyway. And I believe that was when I had the first conscious sight of my idea. Not the shoe; I don't mean that. The shoe was related, but different. All my real idea was right then, however, was an odd realization: that John Coffey and Melinda Moores, different as they might have been in size and sex and skin color, had exactly the same eyes: woeful, sad, and distant. Dying eyes.
   'Come to bed,' my wife said at last. 'Come to bed with me, Paul.'
   So I did, and we made love, and when it was over she went to sleep. As I lay there watching the moon grin and listening to the walls tick—they were at last pulling in, exchanging summer for fall—I thought about John Coffey saying he had helped it. I helped Del's mouse. I helped Mr. Jingles. He's a circus mouse. Sure. And maybe, I thought, we were all circus mice, running around with only the dimmest awareness that God and all His heavenly host were watching us in our Bakelite houses through our ivy-glass windows.
   I slept a little as the day began to lighten—two hours, I guess, maybe three; and I slept the way I always sleep these days here in Georgia Pines and hardly ever did then, in thin little licks. What I went to sleep thinking about was the churches youth. The names changed, depending on the whims of my mother and her sisters, but they were all really the same, all The First Backwoods Church of Praise Jesus, The Lord Is Mighty. In the shadow of those blunt, square steeples, the concept of atonement came up as regularly as the toll of the bell which called the faithful to worship. Only God could forgive sins, could and did, washing them away in the agonal blood of His crucified Son, but that did not change the responsibility of His children to atone for those sins (and even their simple errors of judgement) whenever possible. Atonement was powerful; it was the lock on the door you closed against the past.
   I fell asleep thinking of piney-woods atonement, and Eduard Delacroix on fire as he rode the lightning, and Melinda Moores, and my big boy with the endlessly weeping eyes. These thoughts twisted their way into a dream. In it, John Coffey was sitting on a riverbank and bawling his inarticulate mooncalf's grief up at the early-summer sky while on the other bank a freight-train stormed endlessly toward a rusty trestle spanning the Trapingus. In the crook of each arm the black man held the body of a naked, blonde-haired girlchild. His fists, huge brown rocks at the ends of those arms' were closed. All around him crickets chirred and noseeums flocked; the day hummed with heat. In my dream I went to him, knelt before him, and took his hands. His fists relaxed and gave up their secrets. In one was a spool colored green and red and yellow. In the other was a prison guard's shoe.
   'I couldn't help it,' John Coffey said. 'I tried to take it back, but it was too late.'
   And this time, in my dream, I understood him.
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Underpromise; overdeliver.

Zodijak Gemini
Pol Muškarac
Poruke Odustao od brojanja
Zastava 44°49′N - 20°29′E
mob
Apple iPhone 6s
8

   At nine o'clock the next morning, while I was having a third cup of coffee in the kitchen (my wife said nothing, but I could see disapproval large on her face when she brought it to me), the telephone rang. I went into the parlor to take it, and Central told someone that their party was holding the line. She then told me to have a birdlarky day and rang off... presumably. With Central, you could never quite tell for sure.
   Hal Moores's voice shocked me. Wavery and hoarse, it sounded like the voice of an octogenarian. It occurred to me that it was good that things had gone all right with Curtis Anderson in the tunnel last night, good that he felt about the same as we did about Percy, because this man I was talking to would very likely never work another day at Cold Mountain.
   'Paul, I understand there was trouble last night. I also understand that our friend Mr. Wetmore war, involved.'
   'A spot of trouble,' I admitted, holding the receiver tight to my ear and leaning in toward the horn, 'but the job got done. That's the important thing.'
   'Yes. Of course.'
   'Can I ask who told you?' So I can tie a can to his tail? I didn't add.
   'You can ask, but since it's really none of your beeswax, I think I'll keep my mouth shut on that score. But when I called my office to see if there were any messages or urgent business, I was told an interesting thing.'
   'Oh?'
   'Yes. Seems a transferral application landed in my basket. Percy Wetmore wants to go to Briar Ridge as soon as possible. Must have filled out the application even before last night's shift was over, wouldn't you think?'
   'It sounds that way,' I agreed.
   'Ordinarily I'd let Curtis handle it, but considering the... atmosphere on E Block just lately, I asked Hannah to run it over to me personally on her lunch hour. She has graciously agreed to do so. I'll approve it and see it's forwarded on to the state capital this afternoon. I expect you'll get a look at Percy's backside going out the door in no more than a month. Maybe less.'
   He expected me to be pleased with this news, and had a right to expect it. He had taken time out from tending his wife to expedite a matter that might otherwise have taken upwards of half a year, even with Percy's vaunted connections. Nevertheless, my heart sank. A month! But maybe it didn't matter much, one way or the other. It removed a perfectly natural desire to wait and put off a risky endeavor, and what I was now thinking about would be very risky indeed. Sometimes, when that's the case, it's better to jump before you can lose your nerve. If we were going to have to deal with Percy in any case (always assuming I could get the others to go along with my insanity—always assuming there was a we, in other words), it might as well be tonight.
   'Paul? Are you there?' His voice lowered a little, as if he thought he was now talking to himself. 'Damn, I think I lost the connection.'
   'No, I'm here, Hal. That's great news.'
   'Yes,' he agreed, and I was again struck by how old he sounded. How papery, somehow. 'Oh, I know what you're thinking.'
   No, you don't, Warden, I thought. Never in a million years could you know what I'm thinking.
   'You're thinking that our young friend will still be around for the Coffey execution. That's probably true—Coffey will go well before Thanksgiving, I imagine—but you can put him back in the switch room. No one will object. Including him, I should think.'
   'I'll do that,' I said. 'Hal, how's Melinda?'
   There was a long pause so long I might have thought I'd lost him, except for the sound of his breathing. When he spoke this time, it was in a much lower tone of voice. 'She's sinking,' he said.
   Sinking. That chilly word the old-timers used not to describe a person who was dying, exactly, but one who had begun to uncouple from living.
   'The headaches seem a little better... for now, anyway... but she can't walk without help, she can't pick things up, she loses control of her water while she sleeps... ' There was another pause, and then, in an even lower voice, Hal said something that sounded like 'She wears.'
   'Wears what, Hal?' I asked, frowning. My wife had come into the parlor doorway. She stood there wiping her hands on a dishtowel and looking at me.
   'No,' he said in a voice that seemed to waver between anger and tears. 'She swears.'
   'Oh.' I still didn't know what he meant, but had no intention of pursuing it. I didn't have to; he did it for me.
   'She'll be all right, perfectly normal, talking about her flower-garden or a dress she saw in the catalogue, or maybe about how she heard Roosevelt on the radio and how wonderful he sounds, and then, all at once, she'll start to say the most awful things, the most awful... words. She doesn't raise her voice. It would almost be better if she did, I think, because then... you see, then... '
   'She wouldn't sound so much like herself.'
   'That's it,' he said gratefully. 'But to hear her saying those awful gutter-language things in her sweet voice... pardon me, Paul.' His voice trailed away and I heard him noisily clearing his throat. Then he came back, sounding a little stronger but just as distressed. 'She wants to have Pastor Donaldson over, and I know he's a comfort to her, but how can I ask him? Suppose that he's sitting there, reading Scripture with her, and she calls him a foul name? She could; she called me one last night. She said, 'Hand me that Liberty magazine, you cocksucker, would you?' Paul, where could she have ever heard such language? How could she know those words?'
   'I don't know. Hal, are you going to be home this evening?'
   When he was well and in charge of himself, not distracted by worry or grief, Hal Moores had a cutting and sarcastic facet to his personality; his subordinates feared that side of him even more than his anger or his contempt, I think. His sarcasm, usually impatient and often harsh, could sting like acid. A little of that now splashed on me. It was unexpected, but on the whole I was glad to hear it. All the fight hadn't gone out of him after all, it seemed.
   'No,' he said, 'I'm taking Melinda out square-dancing. We're going to do-si-do, allemand left, and then tell the fiddler he's a rooster-dick motherfucker.'
   I clapped my hand over my mouth to keep from laughing. Mercifully, it was an urge that passed in a hurry.
   'I'm sorry,' he said. 'I haven't been getting much sleep lately. It's made me grouchy. Of course we're going to be home. Why do you ask?'
   'It doesn't matter, I guess,' I said.
   'You weren't thinking of coming by, were you?
   Because if you were on last night, you'll be on tonight. Unless you've switched with somebody?'
   'No, I haven't switched,' I said. 'I'm on tonight.'
   'It wouldn't be a good idea, anyway. Not the way she is right now.'
   'Maybe not. Thanks for your news.'
   'You're welcome. Pray for my Melinda, Paul.'
   I said I would, thinking that I might do quite a bit more than pray. God helps those who help themselves, as they say in The Church of Praise Jesus, The Lord Is Mighty. I hung up and looked at Janice.
   'How's Melly?' she asked.
   'Not good.' I told her what Hal had told me, including the part about the swearing, although I left out cocksucker and rooster-dick motherfucker. I finished with Hal's word, sinking, and Jan nodded sadly. Then she took a closer look at me.
   'What are you thinking about? You're thinking about something, probably no good. It's in your face.'
   Lying was out of the question; it wasn't the way we were with each other. I just told her it was best she not know, at least for the time being.
   'Is it... could it get you in trouble?' She didn't sound particularly alarmed at the idea—more interested than anything—which is one of the things I have always loved about her.
   'Maybe,' I said.
   'Is it a good thing?'
   'Maybe,' I repeated. I was standing there, still turning the phone's crank idly with one finger, while I held down the connecting points with a finger of my other hand.
   'Would you like me to leave you alone while you use the telephone?' she asked. 'Be a good little woman and butt out? Do some dishes? Knit some booties?'
   I nodded. 'That's not the way I'd put it, but—'
   'Are we having extras for lunch, Paul?'
   'I hope so,' I said.
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Zodijak Gemini
Pol Muškarac
Poruke Odustao od brojanja
Zastava 44°49′N - 20°29′E
mob
Apple iPhone 6s
9

   I got Brutal and Dean right away, because both of them were on the exchange. Harry wasn't, not then, at least, but I had the number of his closest neighbor who was. Harry called me back about twenty minutes later, highly embarrassed at having to reverse the charges and sputtering promises to 'pay his share' when our next bill came. I told him we'd count those chickens when they hatched; in the meantime, could he come over to my place for lunch? Brutal and Dean would be here, and Janice had promised to put out some of her famous slaw... not to mention her even more famous apple pie.
   'Lunch just for the hell of it?' Harry sounded skeptical.
   I admitted I had something I wanted to talk to them about, but it was best not gone into, even lightly, over the phone. Harry agreed to come. I dropped the receiver onto the prongs, went to the window, and looked out thoughtfully. Although we'd had the late shift, I hadn't wakened either Brutal or Dean, and Harry hadn't sounded like a fellow freshly turned out of dreamland, either. It seemed that I wasn't the only one having problems with what had happened last night, and considering the craziness I had in mind, that was probably good.
   Brutal, who lived closest to me, arrived at quarter past eleven. Dean showed up fifteen minutes later, and Harry—already dressed for work—about fifteen minutes after Dean. Janice served us cold beef sandwiches, slaw, and iced tea in the kitchen. Only a day before, we would have had it out on the side porch and been glad of a breeze, but the temperature had dropped a good fifteen degrees since the thunderstorm, and a keen-edged wind was snuffling down from the ridges.
   'You're welcome to sit down with us,' I told my wife.
   She shook her head. 'I don't think I want to know what you're up to—I'll worry less if I'm in the dark. I'll have a bite in the parlor. I'm visiting with Miss Jane Austen this week, and she's very good company.'
   'Who's Jane Austen?' Harry asked when she had left. 'Your side or Janices's, Paul? A cousin? Is she pretty?'
   'She's a writer, you nit,' Brutal told him. 'Been dead practically since Betsy Ross basted the stars on the first flag.'
   'Oh.' Harry looked embarrassed. 'I'm not much of a reader. Radio manuals, mostly.'
   'What's on your mind, Paul?' Dean asked.
   'John Coffey and Mr. Jingles, to start with.' They looked surprised, which I had expected—they'd been thinking I wanted to discuss either Delacroix or Percy. Maybe both. I looked at Dean and Harry 'The thing with Mr. Jingles—what Coffey did—happened pretty fast. I don't know if you got there in time to see how broken up the mouse was or not.'
   Dean shook his head. 'I saw the blood on the floor, though.'
   I turned to Brutal.
   'That son of a bitch Percy crushed it,' he said simply. 'It should have died, but it didn't. Coffey did something to it. Healed it somehow. I know how that sounds, but I saw it with my own eyes.'
   I said: 'He healed me, as well, and I didn't just see it, I felt it.' I told them about my urinary infection—how it had come back, how bad it had been (I pointed through the window at the woodpile I'd had to hold onto the morning the pain drove me to my knees), and how it had gone away completely after Coffey touched me. And stayed away.
   It didn't take long to tell. When I was done, they sat and thought about it awhile, chewing on their sandwiches as they did. Then Dean said, 'Black things came out of his mouth. Like bugs.'
   'That's right,' Harry agreed. 'They were black to start with, anyway. Then they turned white and disappeared.' He looked around, considering. 'It's like I damned near forgot the whole thing until you brought it up, Paul. Ain't that funny?'
   'Nothing funny or strange about it,' Brutal said. 'I think that's what people most always do with the stuff they can't make out—just forget it. Doesn't do a person much good to remember stuff that doesn't make any sense. What about it, Paul? Were there bugs when he fixed you?'
   'Yes. I think they're the sickness... the pain... the hurt. He takes it in, then lets it out into the open air again.'
   'Where it dies,' Harry said.
   I shrugged. I didn't know if it died or not, wasn't sure it even mattered.
   'Did he suck it out of you?' Brutal asked. 'He looked like he was sucking it right out of the mouse. The hurt. The... you know. The death.'
   'No,' I said. 'He just touched me. And I felt it. A kind of jolt, like electricity only not painful. But I wasn't dying, only hurting.'
   Brutal nodded. 'The touch and the breath. Just like you hear those backwoods gospel-shouters going on about.'
   'Praise Jesus, the Lord is mighty,' I said.
   'I dunno if Jesus comes into it,' Brutal said, 'but it seems to me like John Coffey is one mighty man.'
   'All right,' Dean said. 'If you say all this happened, I guess I believe it. God works in mysterious ways His wonders to perform. But what's it got to do with us?'
   Well, that was the big question, wasn't it? I took in a deep breath and told them what I wanted to do. They listened, dumbfounded. Even Brutal, who liked to read those magazines with the stories about little green men from space, looked dumbfounded. There was a longer silence when I finished this time, and no one chewing any sandwiches.
   At last, in a gentle and reasonable voice, Brutus Howell said: 'We'd lose our jobs if we were caught, Paul, and we'd be very goddam lucky if that was all that happened. We'd probably end up over in A Block as guests of the state, making wallets and showering in pairs.'
   'Yes,' I said. 'That could happen.'
   'I can understand how you feel, a little,' he went on. 'You know Moores better than us—he's your friend as well as the big boss—and I know you think a lot of his wife... '
   'She's the sweetest woman you could ever hope to meet,' I said, 'and she means the world to him.'
   'But we don't know her the way you and Janice do,' Brutal said. 'Do we, Paul?'
   'You'd like her if you did,' I said. 'At least, you'd like her if you'd met her before this thing got its claws into her. She does a lot of community things, she's a good friend, and she's religious. More than that, she's funny. Used to be, anyway. She could tell you things that'd make you laugh until the tears rolled down your cheeks. But none of those things are the reason I want to help save her, if she can be saved. What's happening to her is an offense, goddammit, an offense. To the eyes and the ears and the heart.'
   'Very noble, but I doubt like hell if that's what put this bee in your bonnet,' Brutal said. 'I think it's what happened to Del. You want to balance it off somehow.'
   And he was right. Of course he was. I knew Melinda Moores better than the others did, but maybe not, in the end, well enough to ask them to risk their jobs for her... and possibly their freedom, as well. Or my own job and freedom, for that matter. I had two children, and the last thing on God's earth that I wanted my wife to have to do was to write them the news that their father was going on trial for... well, what would it be? I didn't know for sure. Aiding and abetting an escape attempt seemed the most likely.
   But the death of Eduard Delacroix had been the ugliest, foulest thing I had ever seen in my life—not just my working life but my whole, entire life—and I had been a party to it. We had all been a party to it, because we had allowed Percy Wetmore to stay even after we knew he was horribly unfit to work in a place like E Block. We had played the game. Even Warden Moores had been a party to it. "His nuts are going to cook whether Wetmore's on the team or not," he had said, and maybe that was well enough, considering what the little Frenchman had done, but in the end Percy had done a lot more than cook Del's nuts; he had blown the little man's eyeballs right out of their sockets and set his damned face on fire. And why? Because Del was a murderer half a dozen times over? No. Because Percy had wet his pants and the little Cajun had had the temerity to laugh at him. We'd been part of a monstrous act, and Percy was going to get away with it. Off to Briar Ridge he would go, happy as a clam at high tide, and there he would have a whole asylum filled with lunatics to practice his cruelties upon. There was nothing we could do about that, but perhaps it was not too late to wash some of the muck off our own hands.
   'In my church they call it atonement instead of balancing,' I said, 'but I guess it comes to the same thing.'
   'Do you really think Coffey could save her?' Dean asked in a soft, awed voice. ''Just... what?... suck that brain tumor out of her head? Like it was a... a peach-pit?'
   'I think he could. It's not for sure, of course, but after what he did to me... and to Mr. Jingles... '
   'That mouse was seriously busted up, all right,' Brutal said.
   'But would he do it?' Harry mused. 'Would he?'
   'If he can, he will,' I said.
   'Why? Coffey doesn't even know her!'
   'Because it's what he does. It's what God made him for.'
   Brutal made a show of looking around, reminding us all that someone was missing. 'What about Percy? You think he's just gonna let this go down?' he asked, and so I told them what I had in mind for Percy By the time I finished, Harry and Dean were looking at me in amazement, and a reluctant grin of admiration had dawned on Brutal's face.
   'Pretty audacious, Brother Paul!' he said. 'Fair takes my breath away!'
   'But wouldn't it be the bee's knees!' Dean almost whispered, then laughed aloud and clapped his hands like a child. 'I mean, voh-doh-dee-oh-doh and twenty-three-skidoo!' You want to remember that Dean had a special interest in the part of my plan that involved Percy—Percy—Percy could have gotten Dean killed, after all, freezing up the way he had.
   'Yeah, but what about after?' Harry said. He sounded gloomy, but his eyes gave him away; they were sparkling, the eyes of a man who wants to be convinced. 'What then?'
   'They say dead men tell no tales,' Brutal rumbled, and I took a quick look at him to make sure he was joking.
   'I think he'll keep his mouth shut,' I said.
   'Really?' Dean looked skeptical. He took off his glasses and began to polish them. 'Convince me.'
   'First, he won't know what really happened—he's going to judge us by himself and think it was just a prank. Second—and more important—he'll be afraid to say anything. That's what I'm really counting on. We tell him that if he starts writing letters and making phone calls, we start writing letters and making phone calls.'
   'About the execution,' Harry said.
   'And about the way he froze when Wharton attacked Dean,' Brutal said. 'I think people finding out about that is what Percy Wetmore's really afraid of.' He nodded slowly and thoughtfully. 'It could work. But Paul... wouldn't it make more sense to bring Mrs. Moores to Coffey than Coffey to Mrs. Moores? We could take care of Percy pretty much the way you laid it out, then bring her in through the tunnel instead of taking Coffey out that way.'
   I shook my head. 'Never happen. Not in a million years.'
   'Because of Warden Moores?'
   'Mat's right. He's so hardheaded he makes old Doubting Thomas look like Joan of Arc. If we bring Coffey to his house, I think we can surprise him into at least letting Coffey make the try. Otherwise... '
   'What were you thinking about using for a vehicle?' Brutal asked.
   'My first thought was the stagecoach,' I said, 'but we'd never get it out of the yard without being noticed, and everyone within a twenty-mile radius knows what it looks like, anyway. I guess maybe we can use my Ford.'
   'Guess again,' Dean said, popping his specs back onto his nose. 'You couldn't get John Coffey into your car if you stripped him naked, covered him with lard, and used a shoehorn. You're so used to looking at him that you've forgotten how big he is.'
   I had no reply to that. Most of my attention that morning had been focused on the problem of Percy—and the lesser but not inconsiderable problem of Wild Bill Wharton. Now I realized that transportation wasn't going to be as simple as I had hoped.
   Harry Terwilliger picked up the remains of his second sandwich, looked at it for a second, then put it down again. 'If we was to actually do this crazy thing,' he said, 'I guess we could use my pickup truck. Sit him in the back of that. Wouldn't be nobody much on the roads at that hour. We're talking about well after midnight, ain't we?'
   'Yes,' I said.
   'You guys're forgetting one thing,' Dean said. 'I know Coffey's been pretty quiet ever since he came on the block, doesn't do much but lay there on his bunk and leak from the eyes, but he's a murderer. Also, he's huge. If he decided he wanted to escape out of the back of Harry's truck, the only way we could stop him would be to shoot him dead. And a guy like that would take a lot of killing, even with a.45. Suppose we weren't able to put him down? And suppose he killed someone else? I'd hate losing my job, and I'd hate going to jail—I got a wife and kids depending on me to put bread in their mouths—but I don't think I'd hate either of those things near as much as having another dead little girl on my conscience.'
   'That won't happen,' I said.
   'How in God's name can you be so sure of that?'
   I didn't answer. I didn't know just how to begin. I had known this would come up, of course I did, but I still didn't know how to start telling them what I knew. Brutal helped me.
   'You don't think he did it, do you, Paul?' He looked incredulous. 'You think that big lug is innocent.'
   'I'm positive he's innocent,' I said.
   'How in the name of Jesus can you be?'
   'There are two things,' I said. 'One of them is my shoe.' I leaned forward over the table and began talking.
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Zodijak Gemini
Pol Muškarac
Poruke Odustao od brojanja
Zastava 44°49′N - 20°29′E
mob
Apple iPhone 6s
Part Five.
Night Journey

1

   Mr. H. G. Wells once wrote a story about a man who invented a time machine, and I have discovered that, in the writing of these memoirs, I have created my own time machine. Unlike Wells's, it can only travel into the past—back to 1932, as a matter of fact, when I was the bull-goose screw in E Block of Cold Mountain State Penitentiary—but it's eerily efficient, for all that. Still, this time machine reminds me of the old Ford I had in those days: you could be sure that it would start eventually, but you never knew if a turn of the key would be enough to fire the motor, or if you were going to have to get out and crank until your arm practically fell off.
   I've had a lot of easy starts since I started telling the story of John Coffey, but yesterday I had to crank. I think it was because I'd gotten to Delacroix's execution, and part of my mind didn't want to have to relive that. It was a bad death, a terrible death, and it happened the way it did because of Percy Wetmore, a young man who loved to comb his hair but couldn't stand to be laughed at—not even by a half bald little Frenchman who was never going to see another Christmas.
   As with most dirty jobs, however, the hardest part is just getting started. It doesn't matter to an engine whether you use the key or have to crank; once you get it going, it'll usually run just as sweet either way. That's how it worked for me yesterday. At first the words came in little bursts of phrasing, then in whole sentences, then in a torrent. Writing is a special and rather terrifying form of remembrance, I've discovered—there is a totality to it that seems almost like rape. Perhaps I only feel that way because I've become a very old man (a thing that happened behind my own back, I sometimes feel), but I don't think so. I believe that the combination of pencil and memory creates a kind of practical magic, and magic is dangerous. As a man who knew John Coffey and saw what he could do—to mice and to men—I feel very qualified to say that.
   Magic is dangerous.
   In any case, I wrote all day yesterday, the words simply flooding out of me, the sunroom of this glorified old folks' home gone, replaced by the storage room at the end of the Green Mile where so many of my problem children took their last sit-me-downs and the bottom of the stairs which led to the tunnel under the road. That was where Dean and Harry and Brutal and I confronted Percy Wetmore over Eduard Delacroix's smoking body and made Percy renew his promise to put in for transfer to the Briar Ridge state mental facility.
   There are always fresh flowers in the sunroom, but by noon yesterday all I could smell was the noxious aroma of the dead man's cooked flesh. The sound of the power mower on the lawn down below had been replaced by the hollow plink of dripping water as it seeped slowly through the tunnel's curved roof. The trip was on. I had travelled back to 1932, in soul and mind, if not body.
   I skipped lunch, wrote until four o'clock or so, and when I finally put my pencil down, my hand was aching. I walked slowly down to the end of the second-floor corridor. There's a window there that looks out on the employee parking lot. Brad Dolan, the orderly who reminds me of Percy—and the one who is altogether too curious about where I go and what I do on my walks—drives an old Chevrolet with a bumper sticker that says I HAVE SEEN GOD AND HIS NAME IS NEWT. It was gone; Brad's shift was over and he'd taken himself off to whatever garden spot he calls home. I envision an Airstream trailer with Hustler gatefolds Scotch-taped to the walls and Dixie Beer cans in the corners.
   I went out through the kitchen, where dinner preparations were getting started. 'What you got in that bag, Mr. Edgecombe?' Norton asked me.
   'It's an empty bottle,' I said. 'I've discovered the Fountain of Youth down there in the woods. I pop down every afternoon about this time and draw a little. I drink it at bedtime. Good stuff, I can tell you.'
   'May be keepin you young,' said George, the other cook, 'but it ain't doin shit for your looks—'
   We all had a laugh at that, and I went out. I found myself looking around for Dolan even though his car was gone, called myself a chump for letting him get so far under my skin, and crossed the croquet course. Beyond it is a scraggy little putting green that looks ever so much nicer in the Georgia Pines brochures, and beyond that is a path that winds into the little copse of woods east of the nursing home. There are a couple of old sheds along this path, neither of them used for anything these days. At the second, which stands close to the high stone wall between the Georgia Pines grounds and Georgia Highway 47, I went in and stayed for a little while.
   I ate a good dinner that night, watched a little TV, and went to bed early. On many nights I'll wake up and creep back down to the TV room, where I watch old movies on the American Movie Channel. Not last night, though; last night I slept like a stone, and with none of the dreams that have so haunted me since I started my adventures in literature. All that writing must have worn me out; I'm not as young as I used to be, you know.
   When I woke and saw that the patch of sun which usually lies on the floor at six in the morning had made it all the way up to the foot of my bed, I hit the deck in a hurry, so alarmed I hardly noticed the arthritic flare of pain in my hips and knees and ankles. I dressed as fast as I could, then hurried down the hall to the window that overlooks the employees' parking lot, hoping the slot where Dolan parks his old Chevrolet would still be empty. Sometimes he's as much as half an hour late—
   No such luck. The car was there, gleaming rustily in the morning sun. Because Mr. Brad Dolan has something to arrive on time for these days, doesn't he? Yes. Old Paulie Edgecombe goes somewhere in the early mornings, old Paulie Edgecombe is up to something, and Mr. Brad Dolan intends to find out what it is. What do you do down there, Paulie? Tell me. He would likely be watching for me already. It would be smart to stay right where I was... except I couldn't.
   'Paul?'
   I turned around so fast I almost fell down. It was my friend Elaine Connelly. Her eyes widened and she put out her hands, as if to catch me. Lucky for her I caught my balance; Elaine's arthritis is terrible, and I probably would have broken her in two like a dry stick if I'd fallen into her arms. Romance doesn't die when you pass into the strange country that lies beyond eighty, but you can forget the Gone with the Wind crap.
   'I'm sorry,' she said. 'I didn't mean to startle you.'
   'That's all right,' I said, and gave her a feeble smile. 'It's a better wake-up than a faceful of cold water. I should hire you to do it every morning.'
   'You were looking for his car, weren't you? Dolan's car.'
   There was no sense kidding her about it, so I nodded. 'I wish I could be sure he's over in the west wing. I'd like to slip out for a little while, but I don't want him to see me.'
   She smiled—a ghost of the teasing imp's smile she must have had as a girl. 'Nosy bastard, isn't he?'
   'Yes.'
   'He's not in the west wing, either. I've already been down to breakfast, sleepyhead, and I can tell you where he is, because I peeked. He's in the kitchen.'
   I looked at her, dismayed. I had known Dolan was curious, but not how curious.
   'Can you put your morning walk off?' Elaine asked.
   I thought about it. 'I could, I suppose, but... '
   'You shouldn't.'
   'No. I shouldn't.'
   Now, I thought, she'll ask me where I go, what I have to do down in those woods that's so damned important.
   But she didn't. Instead she gave me that imp's smile again. It looked strange and absolutely wonderful on her too-gaunt, pain-haunted face. 'Do you know Mr. Howland?' she asked.
   'Sure,' I said, although I didn't see him much; he was in the west wing, which at Georgia Pines was almost like a neighboring country. 'Why?'
   'Do you know what's special about him?'
   I shook my head.
   'Mr. Howland,' Elaine said, smiling more widely than ever, 'is one of only five residents left at Georgia Pines who have permission to smoke. That's because he was a resident before the rules changed.'
   A grandfather clause, I thought. And what place was more fitted for one than an old-age home?
   She reached into the pocket of her blue-and-white-striped dress and pulled two items partway out: a cigarette and a book of matches. 'Thief of green, thief red,' she sang in a lilting, funny voice. 'Little Ellie's going to wet the bed.'
   'Elaine, what—'
   'Walk an old girl downstairs,' she said, putting the cigarette and matches back into her pocket and taking my arm in one of her gnarled hands. We began to walk back down the hall. As we did, I decided to give up and put myself in her hands. She was old and brittle, but not stupid.
   As we went down, walking with the glassy care of the relics we have now become, Elaine said: 'Wait at the foot. I'm going over to the west wing, to the hall toilet there. You know the one I mean, don't you?'
   'Yes,' I said. 'The one just outside the spa. But why?'
   'I haven't had a cigarette in over fifteen years,' she said, 'but I feel like one this morning. I don't know how many puffs it'll take to set off the smoke detector in there, but I intend to find out.'
   I looked at her with dawning admiration, thinking how much she reminded me of my wife—Jan might have done exactly the same thing. Elaine looked back at me, smiling her saucy imp's smile. I cupped my hand around the back of her lovely long neck, drew her face to mine, and kissed her mouth lightly. 'I love you, Ellie,' I said.
   'Oooh, such big talk,' she said, but I could tell she was pleased.
   'What about Chuck Howland?' I asked. 'Is he going to get in trouble?'
   'No, because he's in the TV room, watching Good Morning America with about two dozen other folks. And I'm going to make myself scarce as soon as the smoke detector turns on the west-wing fire alarm.'
   'Don't you fall down and hurt yourself, woman. I'd never forgive myself if—'
   'Oh, stop your fussing,' she said, and this time she kissed me. Love among the ruins. It probably sounds funny to some of you and grotesque to the rest of you, but I'll tell you something, my friend: weird love's better than no love at all.
   I watched her walk away, moving slowly and stiffly (but she will only use a cane on wet days, and only then if the pain is terrible; it's one of her vanities), and waited. Five minutes went by, then ten, and just as I was deciding she had either lost her courage or discovered that the battery of the smoke detector in the toilet was dead, the fire alarm went off in the west wing with a loud, buzzing burr.
   I started toward the kitchen at once, but slowly—there was no reason to hurry until I was sure Dolan was out of my way. A gaggle of old folks, most still in their robes, came out of the TV room (here it's called the Resource Center; now that's grotesque) to see what was going on. Chuck Howland was among them, I was happy to see.
   'Edgecombe!' Kent Avery rasped, hanging onto his walker with one hand and yanking obsessively at the crotch of his pajama pants with the other. 'Real alarm or just another falsie? What do you think?'
   'No way of knowing, I guess,' I said.
   Just about then three orderlies went trotting past, all headed for the west wing, yelling at the folks clustered around the TV-room door to go outside and wait for the all-clear. The third in line was Brad Dolan. He didn't even look at me as he went past, a fact that pleased me to no end. As I went on down toward the kitchen, it occurred to me that the team of Elaine Connelly and Paul Edgecombe would probably be a match for a dozen Brad Dolans, with half a dozen Percy Wetmores thrown in for good measure.
   The cooks in the kitchen were continuing to clear up breakfast, paying no attention to the howling fire. alarm at all.
   'Say, Mr. Edgecombe,' George said. 'I believe Brad Dolan been lookin for you. In fact, you just missed him.'
   Lucky me, I thought. What I said out loud was that I'd probably see Mr. Dolan later. Then I asked if there was any leftover toast lying around from breakfast.
   'Sure,' Norton said, 'but it's stone-cold dead in the market. You runnin late this morning.'
   'I am,' I agreed, 'but I'm hungry.'
   'Only take a minute to make some fresh and hot,' George said, reaching for the bread.
   'Nope, cold will be fine,' I said, and when he handed me a couple of slices (looking mystified—actually both of them looked mystified), I hurried out the door, feeling like the boy I once was, skipping school to go fishing with a jelly fold-over wrapped in waxed paper slipped into the front of my shirt.
   Outside the kitchen door I took a quick, reflexive look around for Dolan, saw nothing to alarm me, and hurried across the croquet course and putting green, gnawing on one of my pieces of toast as I went. I slowed a little as I entered the shelter of the woods, and as I walked down the path, I found my mind turning to the day after Eduard Delacroix's terrible execution.
   I had spoken to Hal Moores that morning, and he had told me that Melinda's brain tumor had caused her to lapse into bouts of cursing and foul language... what my wife had later labelled (rather tentatively; she wasn't sure it was really the same thing) as Tourette's Syndrome. The quavering in his voice, coupled with the memory of how John Coffey had healed both my urinary infection and the broken back of Delacroix's pet mouse, had finally pushed me over the line that runs between just thinking about a thing and actually doing a thing.
   And there was something else. Something that had to do with John Coffey's hands, and my shoe.
   So I had called the men I worked with, the men I had trusted my life to over the years—Dean Stanton, Harry Terwilliger, Brutus Howell. They came to lunch at my house on the day after Delacroix's execution, and they at least listened to me when I outlined my plan. Of course, they all knew that Coffey had healed the mouse; Brutal had actually seen it. So when I suggested that another miracle might result if we took John Coffey to Melinda Moores, they didn't outright laugh. It was Dean Stanton who raised the most troubling question: What if John Coffey escaped while we had him out on his field-trip?
   'Suppose he killed someone else?' Dean asked. 'I'd hate losing my job, and I'd hate going to jail—I got a wife and kids depending on me to put bread in their mouths—but I don't think I'd hate either of those things near as much as having another little dead girl on my conscience.'
   There was silence, then, all of them looking at me, waiting to see how I'd respond. I knew everything would change if I said what was on the tip of my tongue; we had reached a point beyond which retreat would likely become impossible.
   Except retreat, for me, at least, was already impossible. I opened my mouth and said
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   'That won't happen.'
   'How in God's name can you be so sure?' Dean asked.
   I didn't answer. I didn't know just how to begin. I had known this would come up, of course I had, but I still didn't know how to start telling them what was in my head and heart. Brutal helped.
   'You don't think he did it, do you, Paul?' He looked incredulous. 'You think that big lug is innocent.'
   'I'm positive he's innocent,' I said.
   'How can you be?'
   'There are two things,' I said. 'One of them is my shoe.'
   'Your shoe?' Brutal exclaimed. 'What has your shoe got to do with whether or not John Coffey killed those two little girls?'
   'I took off one of my shoes and gave it to him last night,' I said. 'After the execution, this was, when things had settled back down a little. I pushed it through the bars, and he picked it up in those big hands of his. I told him to tie it. I had to make sure, you see, because all our problem children normally wear is slippers—a man who really wants to commit suicide can do it with shoelaces, if he's dedicated. That's something all of us know.'
   They were nodding.
   'He put it on his lap and got the ends of the laces crossed over all right, but then he was stuck. He said he was pretty sure someone had showed him how to do it when he was a lad—maybe his father or maybe one of the boyfriends his mother had after the father was gone—but he'd forgot the knack.'
   'I'm with Brutal—I still don't see what your shoe has to do with whether or not Coffey killed the Detterick twins,' Dean said.
   So I went over the story of the abduction and murder again—what I'd read that hot day in the prison library with my groin sizzling and Gibbons snoring in the comer, and all that the reporter, Hammersmith, told me later.
   'The Dettericks' dog wasn't much of a biter, but it was a world-class barker,' I said. 'The man who took the girls kept it quiet by feeding it sausages. He crept a little closer every time he gave it one, I imagine, and while the mutt was eating the last one, he reached out, grabbed it by the head, and twisted. Broke its neck.
   'Later, when they caught up with Coffey, the deputy in charge of the posse—Rob McGee, his name was-spotted a bulge in the chest pocket of the biballs Coffey was wearing. McGee thought at first it might be a gun. Coffey said it was a lunch, and that's what it turned out to be—a couple of sandwiches and a pickle, wrapped up in newspaper and tied with butcher's string. Coffey couldn't remember who gave it to him, only that it was a woman wearing an apron.'
   'Sandwiches and a pickle but no sausages,' Brutal said.
   'No sausages,' I agreed.
   'Course not,' Dean said. 'He fed those to the dog.'
   'Well, that's what the prosecutor said at the trial,' I agreed, 'but if Coffey opened his lunch and fed the sausages to the dog, how'd he tie the newspaper back up again with that butcher's twine? I don't know when he even would have had the chance, but leave that out of it, for the time being. This man can't even tie a simple granny knot.'
   There was a long moment of thunderstruck silence, broken at last by Brutus. 'Holy shit,' he said in a low voice. 'How come no one brought that up at the trial?'
   'Nobody thought of it,' I said, and found myself again thinking of Hammersmith, the reporter—Hammersmith who had been to college in Bowling Green, Hammersmith who liked to think of himself as enlightened, Hammersmith who had told me that mongrel dogs and Negroes were about the same, that either might take a chomp out of you suddenly, and for no reason. Except he kept calling them your Negroes, as if they were still property... but not his property. No, not his. Never his. And at that time, the South was full of Hammersmiths. Nobody was really equipped to think of it, Coffey's own attorney included.'
   'But you did,' Harry said. 'Goddam, boys, we're sittin here with Mr. Sherlock Holmes.' He sounded simultaneously joshing and awed.
   'Oh, put a cork in it,' I said. 'I wouldn't have thought of it either, if I hadn't put together what he told Deputy McGee that day with what he said after he cured my infection, and what he said after he healed the mouse.'
   'What?' Dean asked.
   'When I went into his cell, it was like I was hypnotized. I didn't feel like I could have stopped doing what he wanted, even if I'd tried.'
   'I don't like the sound of that,' Harry said, and shifted uneasily in his seat.
   'I asked him what he wanted, and he said "Just to help." I remember that very clearly. And when it was over and I was better, he knew. "I helped it," he said. "I helped it, didn't I?" '
   Brutal was nodding. 'Just like with the mouse. You said "You helped it," and Coffey said it back to you like he was a parrot. "I helped Del's mouse." Is that when you knew? It was, wasn't it?.'
   'Yeah, I guess so. I remembered what he said to McGee when McGee asked him what had happened. It was in every story about the murders, just about. "I couldn't help it. I tried to take it back, but it was too late." A man saying a thing like that with two little dead girls in his arms, them white and blonde, him as big as a house, no wonder they got it wrong. They heard what he was saying in a way that would agree with what they were seeing, and what they were seeing was black. They thought he was confessing, that he was saying he'd had a compulsion to take those girls, rape them, and kill them. That he'd come to his senses and tried to stop.
   'But by then it was too late,' Brutal murmured
   'Yes. Except what he was really trying to tell them was that he'd found them, tried to heal them—to bring them back—and had no success. They were too far gone in death.'
   'Paul, do you believe that?' Dean asked. 'Do you really, honest-to-God believe that?'
   I examined my heart as well as I could one final time, then nodded my head. Not only did I know it now, there was an intuitive part of me that had known something wasn't right with John Coffey's situation from the very beginning, when Percy had come onto the block hauling on Coffey's arm and blaring "Dead man walking!" at the top of his lungs. I had shaken hands with him, hadn't I? I had never shaken the hand of a man coming on the Green Mile before, but I had shaken Coffey's.
   'Jesus,' Dean said. 'Good Jesus Christ.'
   'Your shoe's one thing,' Harry said. 'What's the other?'
   'Not long before the posse found Coffey and the girls, the men came out of the woods near the south bank of the Trapingus River. They found a patch of flattened-down grass there, a lot of blood, and the rest of Cora Detterick's nightie. The dogs got confused for a bit. Most wanted to go southeast, downstream along the bank. But two of them—the coon-dogs—wanted to go upstream. 'Bobo Marchant was running the dogs, and when he save the coonies a sniff of the nightgown, they turned with the others.'
   'The coonies got mixed up, didn't they?' Brutal asked. A strange, sickened little smile was playing around the corners of his mouth. 'They ain't built to be trackers, strictly speaking, and they got mixed up on what their job was.'
   'Yes.'
   'I don't get it,' Dean said.
   'The coonies forgot whatever it was Bobo ran under their noses to get them started,' Brutal said. 'By the time they came out on the riverbank, the coonies were tracking the killer, not the girls. That wasn't a problem as long as the killer and the girls were together, but... '
   The light was dawning in Dean's eyes. Harry had already gotten it.
   'When you think about it,' I said, 'you wonder how anybody, even a jury wanting to pin the crime on a wandering black fellow, could have believed John Coffey was their man for even a minute. Just the idea of keeping the dog quiet with food until he could snap its neck would have been beyond Coffey.
   'He was never any closer to the Detterick farm than the south bank of the Trapingus, that's what I think. Six or more miles away. He was just mooning along, maybe meaning to go down to the railroad tracks and catch a freight to somewhere else—when they come off the trestle, they're going slow enough to hop—when he heard a commotion to the north.'
   'The killer?' Brutal asked.
   'The killer. He might have raped them already, or maybe the rape was what Coffey heard. In any case, that bloody patch in the grass was where the killer finished the business; dashed their heads together, dropped them, and then hightailed it.'
   'Hightailed it northwest,' Brutal said. 'The direction the coon-dogs wanted to go.'
   'Right. John Coffey comes through a stand of alders that grows a little way southeast of the spot where the girls were left, probably curious about all the noise, and he finds their bodies. One of them might still have been alive; I suppose it's possible both of them were, although not for much longer. John Coffey wouldn't have known if they were dead, that's for sure. All he knows is that he's got a healing power in his hands, and he tried to use it on Cora and Kathe Detterick. When it didn't work, he broke down, crying and hysterical. Which is how they found him.'
   'Why didn't he stay there, where he found them?' Brutal asked. 'Why take them south along the riverbank? Any idea?'
   'I bet he did stay put, at first,' I said. 'At the trial, they kept talking about a big trampled area, all the grass squashed flat. And John Coffey's a big man.'
   'John Coffey's a fucking giant,' Harry said, pitching his voice very low so my wife wouldn't hear him cuss if she happened to be listening.
   'Maybe he panicked when he saw that what he was doing wasn't working. Or maybe he got the idea that the killer was still there, in the woods upstream, watching him. Coffey's big, you know, but not real brave. Harry, remember him asking if we left a light on in the block after bedtime?'
   'Yeah. I remember thinking how funny that was, what with the size of him.' Harry looked shaken and thoughtful.
   'Well, if he didn't kill the little girls, who did?' Dean asked.
   I shook my head. 'Someone else. Someone white would be my best guess. The prosecutor made a big deal about how it would have taken a strong man to kill a dog as big as the one the Dettericks kept, but—'
   'That's crap,' Brutus rumbled. 'A strong twelve year-old girl could break a big dog's neck, if she took the dog by surprise and knew where to grab. If Coffey didn't do it, it could have been damned near anyone... any man, that is. We'll probably never know.'
   I said, 'Unless he does it again.'
   'We wouldn't know even then, if he did it down Texas or over in California,' Harry said.
   Brutal leaned back, screwed his fists into his eyes like a tired child, then dropped them into his lap again. 'This is a nightmare,' he said. 'We've got a man who may be innocent—who probably is innocent—and he's going to walk the Green Mile just as sure as God made tall trees and little fishes. What are we supposed to do about it? If we start in with that healing-fingers shit, everyone is going to laugh their asses off, and he'll end up in the Fry-O-Lator just the same.'
   'Let's worry about that later,' I said, because I didn't have the slightest idea how to answer him. 'The question right now is what we do—or don't do—about Melly. I'd say step back and take a few days to think it over, but I believe every day we wait raises the chances that he won't be able to help her.'
   'Remember him holding his hands out for the mouse?' Brutal asked. ''Give im to me while there's still time,' he said. While there's still time.'
   'I remember.'
   Brutal considered, then nodded. 'I'm in. I feel bad about Del, too, but mostly I think I just want to see what happens when he touches her. Probably nothing will, but maybe... '
   'I doubt like hell we even get the big dummy off the block,' Harry said, then sighed and nodded. 'But who gives a shit? Count me in.'
   'Me, too,' Dean said. 'Who stays on the block, Paul? Do we draw straws for it?'
   'No, sir,' I said. 'No straws. You stay.'
   'Just like that? The hell you say!' Dean replied, hurt and angry. He whipped off his spectacles and began to polish them furiously on his shirt. 'What kind of a bum deal is that?'
   'The kind you get if you're young enough to have kids still in school,' Brutal said. 'Harry and me's bachelors. Paul's married, but his kids are grown and off on their own, at least. This is a mucho crazy stunt we're planning here; I think we're almost sure to get caught.' He gazed at me soberly. 'One thing you didn't mention, Paul, is that if we do manage to get him out of the slam and then Coffey's healing fingers don't work, Hal Moores is apt to turn us in himself.' He gave me a chance to reply to this, maybe to rebut it, but I couldn't and so I kept my mouth shut. Brutal turned back to Dean and went on. 'Don't get me wrong, you're apt to lose your job, too, but at least you'd have a chance to get clear of prison if the heat really came down. Percy's going to think it was a prank; if you're on the duty desk, you can say you thought the same thing and we never told you any different.'
   'I still don't like it,' Dean said, but it was clear he'd go along with it, like it or not. The thought of his kiddies had convinced him. 'And it's to be tonight? You're sure?'
   'If we're going to do it, it had better be tonight,' Harry said. 'If I get a chance to think about it, I'll most likely lose my nerve.'
   'Let me be the one to go by the infirmary,' Dean said. 'I can do that much at least, can't I?'
   'As long as you can do what needs doing without getting caught,' Brutal said.
   Dean looked offended, and I clapped him on the shoulder. 'As soon after you clock in as you can... all right?'
   'You bet.'
   My wife popped her head through the door as if I'd given her a cue to do so. 'Who's for more iced tea?' she asked brightly. 'What about you, Brutus?'
   'No, thanks,' he said. 'What I'd like is a good hard knock of whiskey, but under the circumstances, that might not be a good idea.'
   Janice looked at me; smiling mouth, worried eyes. 'What are you getting these boys into, Paul?' But before I could even think of framing a reply, she raised her hand and said, 'Never mind, I don't want to know.'
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   Later, long after the others were gone and while I was dressing for work, she took me by the arm, swung me around, and looked into my eyes with fierce intensity.
   'Melinda?' she asked.
   I nodded.
   'Can you do something for her, Paul? Really do something for her, or is it all wishful dreaming brought on by what you saw last night?'
   I thought of Coffey's eyes, of Coffey's hands, and of the hypnotized way I'd gone to him when he'd wanted me. I thought of him holding out his hands for Mr. Jingles's broken, dying body. While there's still time, he had said. And the black swirling things that turned white and disappeared.
   'I think we might be the only chance she has left,' I said at last.
   'Then take it,' she said, buttoning the front of my new fall coat. It had been in the closet since my birthday at the beginning of September, but this was only the third or fourth time I'd actually worn it. 'Take it.'
   And she practically pushed me out the door.
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   I clocked in that night—in many ways the strangest night of my entire life—at twenty past six. I thought I could still smell the faint, lingering odor of burned flesh on the air. It had to be an illusion—the doors to the outside, both on the block and in the storage room, had been open most of the day, and the previous two shifts had spent hours scrubbing in there—but that didn't change what my nose was telling me, and I didn't think I could have eaten any dinner even if I hadn't been scared almost to death about the evening which lay ahead.
   Brutal came on the block at quarter to seven, Dean at ten 'til. I asked Dean if he would go over to the infirmary and see if they had a heating pad for my back, which I seemed to have strained that early morning, helping to carry Delacroix's body down into the tunnel. Dean said he'd be happy to. I believe he wanted to tip me a wink, but restrained himself.
   Harry clocked on at three minutes to seven.
   'The truck?' I asked.
   'Where we talked about.'
   So far, so good. There followed a little passage of time when we stood by the duty desk, drinking coffee and studiously not mentioning what we were all thinking and hoping: that Percy was late, that maybe Percy wasn't going to show up at all. Considering the hostile reviews he'd gotten on the way he'd handled the electrocution, that seemed at least possible.
   But Percy apparently subscribed to that old axiom about how you should get right back on the horse that had thrown you, because here he came through the door at six minutes past seven, resplendent in his blue uniform, with his sidearm on one hip and his hickory stick in its ridiculous custom-made holster on the other. He punched his time-card, then looked around at us warily (except for Dean, who hadn't come back from the infirmary yet). 'My starter busted,' he said. 'I had to crank.'
   'Aw,' Harry said, 'po' baby.'
   'Should have stayed home and got the cussed thing fixed,' Brutal said blandly. 'We wouldn't want you straining your arm none, would we, boys?'
   'Yeah, you'd like that, wouldn't you?' Percy sneered, but I thought he seemed reassured by the relative mildness of Brutal's response. That was good. For the next few hours we'd have to walk a line with him—not too hostile, but not too friendly, either. After last night, he'd find anything even approaching warmth suspect. We weren't going to get him with his guard down, we all knew that, but I thought we could catch him with it a long piece from all the way up if we played things just right. It was important that we move fast, but it was also important—to me, at least—that nobody be hurt. Not even Percy Wetmore.
   Dean came back and gave me a little nod.
   'Percy,' I said, 'I want you to go on in the storeroom and mop down the floor. Stairs to the tunnel, too. Then you can write your report on last night.'
   'That should be creative,' Brutal remarked, hooking his thumbs into his belt and looking up at the ceiling.
   'You guys are funnier'n a fuck in church,' Percy said, but beyond that he didn't protest. Didn't even point out the obvious, which was that the floor in there had already been washed at least twice that day. My guess is that he was glad for the chance to be away from us.
   I went over the previous shift report, saw nothing that concerned me, and then took a walk down to Wharton's cell. He was sitting there on his bunk with his knees drawn up and his arms clasped around his shins, looking at me with a bright, hostile smile.
   'Well, if it ain't the big boss,' he said. 'Big as life and twice as ugly. You look happier'n a pig kneedeep in shit, Boss Edgecombe. Wife give your pecker a pull before you left home, did she?'
   'How you doing, Kid?' I asked evenly, and at that he brightened for real. He let go of his legs, stood up, and stretched. His smile broadened, and some of the hostility went out of it.
   'Well, damn!' he said. 'You got my name right for once! What's the matter with you, Boss Edgecombe? You sick or sumpin?'
   No, not sick. I'd been sick, but John Coffey had taken care of that. His hands no longer knew the trick of tying a shoe, if they ever had, but they knew other tricks. Yes indeed they did.
   'My friend,' I told him, 'if you want to be a Billy the Kid instead of a Wild Bill, it's all the same to me.'
   He puffed visibly, like one of those loathsome fish that live in South American rivers and can sting you almost to death with the spines along their backs and sides. I dealt with a lot of dangerous men during my time on the Mile, but few if any so repellent as William Wharton, who considered himself a great outlaw, but whose jailhouse behavior rarely rose above pissing or spitting through the bars of his cell. So far we hadn't given him the awed respect he felt was his by right, but on that particular night I wanted him tractable. If that meant lathering on the softsoap, I would gladly lather it on.
   'I got a lot in common with the Kid, and you just better believe it,' Wharton said. 'I didn't get here for stealing candy out of a dimestore.' As proud as a man who's been conscripted into the Heroes' Brigade of the French Foreign Legion instead of one whose ass has been slammed into a cell seventy long steps from the electric chair. 'Where's my supper?'
   'Come on, Kid, report says you had it at five-fifty. Meatloaf with gravy, mashed, peas. You don't con me that easy.'
   He laughed expansively and sat down on his bunk again. 'Put on the radio, then.' He said radio in the way people did back then when they were joking, so it rhymed with the fifties slang word 'Daddy-O.' It's funny how much a person can remember about times when his nerves were tuned so tight they almost sang.
   'Maybe later, big boy,' I said. I stepped away from his cell and looked down the corridor. Brutal had strolled down to the far end, where he checked to make sure the restraint-room door was on the single lock instead of the double. I knew it was, because I'd already checked it myself. Later on, we'd want to be able to open that door as quick as we could. There would be no time spent emptying out the attic-type rick-rack that had accumulated in there over the years; we'd taken it out, sorted it, and stored it in other places not long after Wharton joined our happy band. It had seemed to us the room with the soft walls was apt to get a lot of use, at least until "Billy the Kid" strolled the Mile.
   John Coffey, who would usually have been lying down at this time, long, thick legs dangling and face to the wall, was sitting on the end of his bunk with his hands clasped, watching Brutal with an alertness—a thereness—that wasn't typical of him. He wasn't leaking around the eyes, either.
   Brutal tried the door to the restraint room, then came on back up the Mile. Hie glanced at Coffey as he passed Coffey's cell, and Coffey said a curious thing: 'Sure. I'd like a ride.' As if responding to something Brutal had said.
   Brutal's eyes met mine. He knows, I could almost hear him saying. Somehow he knows.
   I shrugged and spread my hands, as if to say Of course he knows.
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Poruke Odustao od brojanja
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Apple iPhone 6s
5

   Old Toot-Toot made his last trip of the night down to E Block with his cart at about quarter to nine. We bought enough of his crap to make him smile with avarice.
   'Say, you boys seen that mouse?' he asked.
   We shook our heads.
   'Maybe Pretty Boy has,' Toot said, and gestured with his head in the direction of the storage room, where Percy was either washing the floor, writing his report, or picking his ass.
   'What do you care? It's none of your affair, either way,' Brutal said. 'Roll wheels, Toot. You're stinkin the place up.'
   Toot smiled his peculiarly unpleasant smile, toothless and sunken, and made a business of sniffing the air. 'That ain't me you smell,' he said. 'That be Del, sayin so-long.'
   Cackling, he rolled his cart out the door and into the exercise yard. And he went on rolling it for another ten years, long after I was gone—hell, long after Cold Mountain was gone—selling Moon Pies and pops to the guards and prisoners who could afford them. Sometimes even now I hear him in my dreams, yelling that he's fryin, he's fryin, he's a done tom turkey.
   The time stretched out after Toot was gone, the clock seeming to crawl. We had the radio for an hour and a half, Wharton braying laughter at Fred Allen and Allen's Alley, even though I doubt like hell he understood many of the jokes. John Coffey sat on the end of his bunk, hands clasped, eyes rarely leaving whoever was at the duty desk. I have seen men waiting that way in bus stations for their buses to be called.
   Percy came in from the storage room around quarter to eleven and handed me a report which had been laboriously written in pencil. Eraser-crumbs lay over the sheet of paper in gritty smears. He saw me run my thumb over one of these, and said hastily: 'That's just a first pass, like. I'm going to copy it over. What do you think?'
   What I thought was that it was the most outrageous goddam whitewash I'd read in all my born days. What I told him was that it was fine, and he went away, satisfied.
   Dean and Harry played cribbage, talking too loud, squabbling over the count too often, and looking at the crawling hands of the clock every five seconds or so. On at least one of their games that night, they appeared to go around the board three times instead of twice. There was so much tension in the air that I felt I could almost have carved it like clay, and the only people who didn't seem to feel it were Percy and Wild Bill.
   Then it got to be ten of twelve, I could stand it no longer and gave Dean a little nod. He went into my office with a bottle of R.C. Cola bought off Toot's cart, and came back out a minute or two later. The cola was now in a tin cup, which a prisoner can't break and then slash with.
   I took it and glanced around. Harry, Dean, and Brutal were all watching me. So, for that matter, was John Coffey. Not Percy, though. Percy had returned to the storage room, where he probably felt more at ease on this particular night. I gave the tin cup a quick sniff and got no odor except for the R.C., which had an odd but pleasant cinnamon smell back in those days.
   I took it down to Wharton's cell. He was lying on his bunk. He wasn't masturbating—yet, anyway—but had raised quite a boner inside his shorts and was giving it a good healthy twang every now and again, like a dopey bass-fiddler hammering an extra-thick E-string.
   'Kid,' I said.
   'Don't bother me,' he said.
   'Okay,' I agreed. 'I brought you a pop for behaving like a human being all night—damn near a record for you—but I'll just drink it myself.'
   I made as if to do just that, raising the tin cup (battered all up and down the sides from many angry bangings on many sets of cell bars) to my lips. Wharton was off the bunk in a flash, which didn't surprise me. It wasn't a high-risk bluff; most deep cons—lifers, rapists, and the men slated for Old Sparky—are pigs for their sweets, and this one was no exception.
   'Gimme that, you clunk,' Wharton said. He spoke as if he were the foreman and I was just another lowly peon. 'Give it to the Kid.'
   I held it just outside the bars, letting him be the one to reach through. Doing it the other way around is a recipe for disaster, as any long-time prison screw will tell you. That was the kind of stuff we thought of without even knowing we were thinking of it—the way we knew not to let the cons call us by our first names, the way we knew that the sound of rapidly jingling keys meant trouble on the block, because it was the sound of a prison guard running and prison guards never run unless there's trouble in the valley. Stuff Percy Wetmore was never going to get wise to.
   Tonight, however, Wharton had no interest in grabbing or choking. He snatched the tin cup, downed the pop in three long swallows, then voiced a resounding belch. 'Excellent!' he said.
   I held my hand out. 'Cup.'
   He held it for a moment, teasing with his eyes. 'Suppose I keep it?'
   I shrugged. 'We'll come in and take it back. You'll go down to the little room. And you will have drunk your last R.C. Unless they serve it down in hell, that is.'
   His smile faded. 'I don't like jokes about hell, screwtip.' He thrust the cup out through the bars. 'Here. Take it.'
   I took it. From behind me, Percy said: 'Why in God's name did you want to give a lugoon like him a soda-pop?'
   Because it was loaded with enough infirmary dope to put him on his back for forty-eight hours, and he never tasted a thing, I thought.
   'With Paul,' Brutal said, 'the quality of mercy is not strained; it droppeth like the gentle rain from heaven.'
   'Huh?' Percy asked, frowning.
   'Means he's a soft touch. Always has been, always will be. Want to play a game of Crazy Eights, Percy?'
   Percy snorted. 'Except for Go Fish and Old Maid, that's the stupidest card-game ever made.'
   'That's why I thought you might like a few hands,' Brutal said, smiling sweetly.
   'Everybody's a wisenheimer,' Percy said, and sulked off into my office. I didn't care much for the little rat parking his ass behind my desk, but I kept my mouth shut.
   The clock crawled. Twelve-twenty; twelve-thirty. At twelve-forty, John Coffey got up off his bunk and stood at his cell door, hands grasping the bars loosely. Brutal and I walked down to Wharton's cell and looked in. He lay there on his bunk, smiling up at the ceiling. His eyes were open, but they looked like big glass balls. One hand lay on his chest; the other dangled limply off the side of his bunk, knuckles brushing the floor.
   'Gosh,' Brutal said, 'from Billy the Kid to Willie the Weeper in less than an hour. I wonder how many of those morphine pills Dean put in that tonic.'
   'Enough,' I said. There was a little tremble in my voice. I don't know if Brutal heard it, but I sure did. 'Come on. We're going to do it.'
   'You don't want to wait for beautiful there to pass out?'
   'He's passed out now, Brute. He's just too buzzed to close his eyes.'
   'You're the boss.' He looked around for Harry, but Harry was already there. Dean was sitting bolt-upright at the duty desk, shuffling the cards so hard and fast it was a wonder they didn't catch fire, throwing a little glance to his left, at my office, with every flutter-shuffle. Keeping an eye out for Percy.
   'Is it time?' Harry asked. His long, horsey face was very pale above his blue uniform blouse, but he looked determined.
   'Yes,' I said. 'If we're going through with it, it's time.'
   Harry crossed himself and kissed his thumb. Then he went down to the restraint room, unlocked it, and came back with the straitjacket. He handed it to Brutal. The three of us walked up the Green Mile. Coffey stood at his cell door, watching us go, and said not a word. When we reached the duty desk, Brutal put the straitjacket behind his back, which was broad enough to conceal it easily.
   'Luck,' Dean said. He was as pale as Harry, and looked just as determined.
   Percy was behind my desk, all right, sitting in my chair and frowning over the book he'd been toting around with him the last few nights—not Argosy or Stag but Caring for the Mental Patient in Institutions. You would have thought, from the guilty, worried glance he threw our way when we walked in, that it had been The Last Days of Sodom and Gomorrah.
   'What?' he asked, closing the book in a hurry. 'What do you want?'
   'To talk to you, Percy,' I said, 'that's all.'
   But he read a hell of a lot more than a desire to talk on our faces, and was up like a shot, hurrying—not quite running, but almost—toward the open door to the storeroom. He thought we had come to give him a ragging at the very least, and more likely a good roughing up.
   Harry cut around behind him and blocked the doorway, arms folded on his chest.
   'Saaay!' Percy turned to me, alarmed but trying not to show it. 'What is this?'
   'Don't ask, Percy,' I said. I had thought I'd be okay—back to normal, anyway—once we actually got rolling on this crazy business, but it wasn't working out that way. I couldn't believe what I was doing. It was like a bad dream. I kept expecting my wife to shake me awake and tell me I'd been moaning in my sleep. 'It'll be easier if you just go along with it.
   'What's Howell got behind his back?' Percy asked in a ragged voice, turning to get a better look at Brutal.
   'Nothing,' Brutal said. 'Well... this, I suppose—!'
   He whipped the straitjacket out and shook it beside one hip, like a matador shaking his cape to make the bull charge.
   Percy's eyes widened, and he lunged. He meant to run, but Harry grabbed his arms and a lunge was all he was able to manage.
   'Let go of me!' Percy shouted, trying to jerk out of Harry's grasp. It wasn't going to happen, Harry outweighed him by almost a hundred pounds and had the muscles of a man who spent most of his spare time plowing and chopping, but Percy gave it a good enough effort to drag Harry halfway across the room and to rough up the unpleasant green carpet I kept meaning to replace. For a moment I thought he was even going to get one arm free panic can be one hell of a motivator.
   'Settle down, Percy,' I said. 'It'll go easier if—'
   'Don't you tell me to settle down, you ignoramus!' Percy yelled, jerking his shoulders and trying to free his arms. 'Just get away from me! All of you! I know people! Big people! If you don't quit this, you'll have to go all the way to South Carolina just to get a meal in a soup kitchen!'
   He gave another forward lunge and ran his upper thighs into my desk. The book he'd been reading, Caring for the Mental Patient in Institutions, gave a jump, and the smaller, pamphlet-sized book which had been hidden inside it popped out. No wonder Percy had looked guilty when we came in. It wasn't The Last Days of Sodom and Gomorrah, but it was the one we sometimes gave to inmates who were feeling especially horny and who had been well-behaved enough to deserve a treat. I've mentioned it, I think—the little cartoon book where Olive Oyl does everybody except Sweet Pea, the kid.
   I found it sad that Percy had been in my office and pursuing such pallid porn, and Harry—what I could see of him from over Percy's straining shoulder—looked mildly disgusted, but Brutal hooted with laughter, and that took the fight out of Percy, at least for the time being.
   'Oh Poicy,' he said. 'What would your mother say? For that matter, what would the governor say?'
   Percy was blushing a dark red. 'Just shut up. And leave my mother out of it.'
   Brutal tossed me the straitjacket and pushed his face up into Percy's. 'Sure thing. Just stick out your arms like a good boy.'
   Percy's lips were trembling, and his eyes were too bright. He was, I realized, on the verge of tears. 'I won't,' he said in a childish, trembling voice, 'and you can't make me.' Then he raised his voice and began to scream for help. Harry winced and so did I. If we ever came close to just dropping the whole thing, it was then. We might have, except for Brutal. He never hesitated. He stepped behind Percy so he was shoulder to shoulder with Harry, who still had Percy's hands pinned behind him. Brutal reached up and took Percy's ears in his hands.
   'Stop that yelling,' Brutal said. 'Unless you want to have a pair of the world's most unique teabag caddies.'
   Percy quit yelling for help and just stood there, trembling and looking down at the cover of the crude cartoon book, which showed Popeye and Olive doing it in a creative way I had heard of but never tried. 'Oooh, Popeye!' read the balloon over Olive's head. 'Uck-uck-uck-uck!' read the one over Popeye's. He was still smoking his pipe.
   'Hold out your arms,' Brutal said, 'and let's have no more foolishness about it. Do it now.'
   'I won't,' Percy said. 'I won't, and you can't make me.'
   'You're dead wrong about that, you know,' Brutal said, then clamped down on Percy's ears and twisted them the way you might twist the dials on an oven. An oven that wasn't cooking the way you wanted, Percy let out a miserable shriek of pain and surprise that I would have given a great deal not to have heard. It wasn't just pain and surprise, you see; it was understanding. For the first time in his life, Percy was realizing that awful things didn't just happen to other people, those not fortunate enough to be related to the governor. I wanted to tell Brutal to stop, but of course I couldn't. Things had gone much too far for that. All I could do was to remind myself that Percy had put Delacroix through God knew what agonies simply because Delacroix had laughed at him. The reminder didn't go very far toward soothing the way I felt. Perhaps it might have, if I'd been built more along the lines of Percy.
   'Stick those arms out there, honey,' Brutal said, 'or you get another.'
   Harry had already let go of young Mr. Wetmore. Sobbing like a little kid, the tears which had been standing in his eyes now spilling down his cheeks, Percy shot his hands out straight in front of him, like a sleepwalker in a movie comedy. I had the sleeves of the straitjacket up his arms in a trice. I hardly had it over his shoulders before Brutal had let go of Percy's ears and grabbed the straps hanging down from the jacket's cuffs. He yanked Percy's hands around to his sides, so that his arms were crossed tightly on his chest. Harry, meanwhile, did up the back and snapped the cross-straps. Once Percy gave m and stuck out his arms, the whole thing took less than ten seconds.
   'Okay, hon,' Brutal said. 'Forward harch.'
   But he wouldn't. He looked at Brutal, then turned his terrified, streaming eyes on me. Nothing about his connections now, or how we'd have to go all the way to South Carolina just to get a free meal; he was far past that.
   'Please,' he whispered in a hoarse, wet voice. 'Don't put me in with him, Paul.'
   Then I understood why he had panicked, why he'd fought us so hard. He thought we were going to put him in with Wild Bill Wharton; that his punishment for the dry sponge was to be a dry cornholing from the resident psychopath. Instead of feeling sympathy for Percy at this realization, I felt disgust and a hardening of my resolve. He was, after all, judging us by the way he would have behaved, had our positions been reversed.
   'Not Wharton,' I said. 'The restraint room, Percy. You're going to spend three or four hours in there, all by yourself in the dark, thinking about what you did to Del. It's probably too late for you to learn any new lessons about how people are supposed to behave—Brute thinks so, anyway—but I'm an optimist. Now move.'
   He did, muttering under his breath that we'd be sorry for this, plenty sorry, just wait and see, but on the whole he seemed relieved and reassured.
   When we herded him out into the hall, Dean gave us a look of such wide-eyed surprise and dewy innocence that I could have laughed, if the business hadn't been so serious. I've seen better acting in backwoods Grange revues.
   'Say, don't you think the joke's gone far enough?' Dean asked.
   'You just shut up, if you know what's good for you,' Brutal growled. These were lines we'd scripted at lunch, and that was just what they sounded like to me, scripted lines, but if Percy was scared enough and confused enough, they still might save Dean Stanton's job in a pinch. I myself didn't think so, but anything was possible. Any time I've doubted that, then or since, I just think about John Coffey, and Delacroix's mouse.
   We ran Percy down the Green Mile, him stumbling and gasping for us to slow down, he was going to go flat on his face if we didn't slow down. Wharton was on his bunk, but we went by too fast for me to see if he was awake or asleep. John Coffey was standing at his cell door and watching. 'You're a bad man and you deserve to go in that dark place,' he said, but I don't think Percy heard him.
   Into the restraint room we went, Percy's cheeks red and wet with tears, his eyes rolling into their sockets, his pampered locks all flopping down on his forehead. Harry pulled Percy's gun with one hand and his treasured hickory, head-knocker with the other. 'You'll get em back, don't worry,' Harry said. He sounded a trifle embarrassed.
   'I wish I could say the same about your job,' Percy replied. 'All your jobs. You can't do this to me! You can't!'
   He was obviously prepared to go on in that vein for quite awhile, but we didn't have time to listen to his sermon. In my pocket was a roll of friction-tape, the thirties ancestor of the strapping-tape folks use today. Percy saw it and started to back away. Brutal grabbed him from behind and hugged him until I had slapped the tape over his mouth, winding the roll around to the back of his head, just to be sure. He was going to have a few less swatches of hair when the tape came off, and a pair of seriously chapped lips into the bargain, but I no longer much cared, I'd had a gutful of Percy Wetmore.
   We backed away from him. He stood in the middle of the room, under the caged light, wearing the straitjacket, breathing through flared nostrils, and making muffled mmmph! mmmph! sounds from behind the tape. All in all, he looked as crazy as any other prisoner we'd ever jugged in that room.
   'The quieter you are, the sooner you get out,' I said. 'Try to remember that, Percy.'
   'And if you get lonely, think about Olive Oyl,' Harry advised. 'Uck-uck-uck-uck.'
   Then we went out. I closed the door and Brutal locked it. Dean was standing a little way up the Mile, just outside of Coffey's cell. He had already put the master key in the top lock. The four of us looked a each other, no one saying anything. There was no need to. We had started the machinery; all we could do now was hope that it ran the course we had laid out instead of jumping the tracks somewhere along the line.
   'You still want to go for that ride, John?' Brutal asked,
   'Yes, sir,' Coffey said. 'I reckon.'
   'Good,' Dean said. He turned the first lock, removed the key, and seated it in the second.
   'Do we need to chain you up, John?' I asked.
   Coffey appeared to think about this. 'Can if you want to,' he said at last. 'Don't need to.'
   I nodded at Brutal, who opened the cell door, then turned to Harry, who was more or less pointing Percy's.45 at Coffey as Coffey emerged from his cell.
   'Give those to Dean,' I said.
   Harry blinked like someone awakening from a momentary doze, saw Percy's gun and stick still in his hands, and passed them over to Dean. Coffey, meanwhile, hulked in the corridor with his bald skull almost brushing one of the caged overhead lights. Standing there with his hands in front of him and his shoulders sloped forward to either side of his barrel chest, he made me think again, as I had the first time I saw him, of a huge captured bear.
   'Lock Percy's toys in the duty desk until we get back,' I said.
   'If we get back,' Harry added.
   'I will,' Dean said to me, taking no notice of Harry.
   'And if someone shows up—probably no one will, but if someone does—what do you say?'
   'That Coffey got upset around midnight,' Dean said. He looked as studious as a college student taking a big exam. 'We had to give him the jacket and but him in the restraint room. If there's noise, who ever hears it'll just think it's him.' He raised his chin to John Coffey.
   'And what about us?' Brutal asked.
   'Paul's over in Admin, pulling Del's file and going over the witnesses,' Dean said. 'It's especially important this time, because the execution was such a balls-up. He said he'd probably be there the rest of the shift. You and Harry and Percy are over in the laundry, washing your clothes.'
   Well, that was what folks said, anyway. There was a crap-game in the laundry supply room some nights; on others it was blackjack or poker or acey-deucey. Whatever it was, the guards who participated were said to be washing their clothes. There was usually moonshine at these get-togethers, and on occasion a joystick would go around the circle. It's been the same in prisons since prisons were invented, I suppose. When you spend your life taking care of mudmen, you can't help getting a little dirty yourself. In any case, we weren't likely to be checked up on. "Clothes washing" was treated with great discretion at Cold Mountain.
   'Right with Eversharp,' I said, turning Coffey around and putting him in motion. 'And if it all falls down, Dean, you. don't know nothing about nothing.'
   'That's easy to say, but—'
   At that moment, a skinny arm shot out from between the bars of Wharton's cell and grabbed Coffey's slab of a bicep. We all gasped. Wharton should have been dead to the world, all but comatose, yet here he stood, swaying back and forth on his feet like a hard-tagged fighter, grinning blearily.
   Coffey's reaction was remarkable. He didn't pull away, but he also gasped, pulling air in over his teeth like someone who has touched something cold and unpleasant. His eyes widened, and for a moment he looked as if he and dumb had never even met, let alone got up together every morning and lain down together every night. He had looked alive—there—when he had wanted me to come into his cell so he could touch me. Help me, in Coffeyspeak. He had looked that way again when he'd been holding his hands out for the mouse. Now, for the third time, his face had lit up, as if a spotlight had suddenly been turned on inside his brain. Except it was different this time. It was colder this time, and for the first time I wondered what might happen if John Coffey were suddenly to run amok. We had our guns, we could shoot him, but actually taking him down might not be easy to do.
   I saw similar thoughts on Brutal's face, but Wharton just went on grinning his stoned, loose-lipped grin—'Where do you think you're going?' he asked. It came out something like Wherra fink yerr gone?
   Coffey stood still, looking first at Wharton, then at Wharton's hand, then back into Wharton's face. I could not read that expression. I mean I could see the intelligence in it, but I couldn't read it. As for Wharton, I wasn't worried about him at all. He wouldn't remember any of this later; he was like a drunk walking in a blackout.
   'You're a bad man,' Coffey whispered, and I couldn't tell what I heard in his voice—pain or anger or fear. Maybe all three. Coffey looked down at the hand on his arm again, the way you might look at a bug which could give you a really nasty bite, had it a mind.
   'That's right, nigger,' Wharton said with a bleary, cocky smile. 'Bad as you'd want.'
   I was suddenly positive that something awful was going to happen, something that would change the planned course of this early morning as completely as a cataclysmic earthquake can change the course of a river. It was going to happen, and nothing I or any of us did would stop it.
   Then Brutal reached down, plucked Wharton's hand off John Coffey's arm, and that feeling stopped. It was as if some potentially dangerous circuit had been broken. I told you that in my time in E Block, the governor's line never rang. That was true, but I imagine that if it ever had, I would have felt the same relief that washed over me when Brutal removed Wharton's hand from the big man towering beside me. Coffey's eyes dulled over at once; it was as if the searchlight inside his head had been turned off.
   'Lie down, Billy,' Brutal said. 'Take you some rest.' That was my usual line of patter, but under the circumstances, I didn't mind Brutal using it.
   'Maybe I will,' Wharton agreed. He stepped back, swayed, almost went over, and caught his balance at the last second. 'Whoo, daddy. Whole room's spinnin around. Like bein drunk.'
   He backed toward his bunk, keeping his bleary regard on Coffey as he went. 'Niggers ought to have they own 'lectric chair,' he opined. Then the backs of his knees struck his bunk and he swooped down onto it. He was snoring before his head touched his thin prison pillow, deep blue shadows brushed under the hollows of his eyes and the tip of his tongue lolling out.
   'Christ, how'd he get up with so much dope in him?' Dean whispered.
   'It doesn't matter, he's out now,' I said. 'If he starts to come around, give him another pill dissolved in a glass of water. No more than one, though. We don't want to kill him.'
   'Speak for yourself,' Brutal rumbled, and gave Wharton a contemptuous look. 'You can't kill a monkey like him with dope, anyway. They thrive on it.'
   'He's a bad man,' Coffey said, but in a lower voice this time, as if he was not quite sure of what he was saying, or what it meant.
   'That's right,'. Brutal said. 'Most wicked. But that's not a problem now, because we ain't going to tango with him anymore.' We started walking again, the four of us surrounding Coffey like worshippers circling an idol that's come to some stumbling kind of half life. 'Tell me something, John—do you know where we're taking you?'
   'To help,' he said. 'I think... to help... a lady?' He looked at Brutal with hopeful anxiety.
   Brutal nodded. 'That's right. But how do you know that? How do you know?'
   John Coffey considered the question carefully, then shook his head. 'I don't know,' he told Brutal. 'To tell you the truth, boss, I don't know much of anything. Never have.'
   And with that we had to be content.
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