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seen as little snow as he could manage in his lifetime); and the wind was
blowing a capricious gale — now from the west; now backing around to the north;
sending clouds of powdery snow across his field of vision; making him coldly
aware again and again that if he missed a turn he might well plunge two hundred
feet off the road; the Electra cartwheeling ass over teapot as it went down。
Making it worse was his own amateur status as a winter driver。 It scared him to
have the yellow center line buried under swirling; drifting snow; and it scared
him when the heavy gusts of wind came unimpeded through the notches in the hills
and actually made the heavy Buick slew around。 It scared him that the road
information signs were mostly masked with snow and you could flip a coin as to
whether the road was going to break right or left up ahead in the white drive…in
movie screen he seemed to be driving through。 He was scared; all right。 He had
driven in a cold sweat since climbing into the hills west of Boulder and Lyons;
handling the accelerator and brake as if they were Ming vases。 Between rock 'n'
roll tunes on the radio; the disc jockey constantly adjured motorists to stay
off the main highways and under no conditions to go into the mountains; because
many roads were impassable and all of them were dangerous。 Scores of minor
accidents had been reported; and two serious ones: a party of skiers in a VW
microbus and a family that had been bound for Albuquerque through the Sangre de
Cristo Mountains。 The bined score on both was four dead and five wounded。 〃So
stay off those roads and get into the good music here at KTLK;〃 the jock
concluded cheerily; and then pounded Hallorann's misery by playing 〃Seasons
in the Sun。〃 〃We had joy; we had fun; we had — 〃 Terry Jacks gibbered happily; and
Hallorann snapped the radio off viciously; knowing he would have it back on in
five minutes。 No matter how bad it was; it was better than riding alone through
this white madness。
(Admit it。 Dis heah black boy has got at least one long stripe of yaller 。。。
and it runs rant up his ebberlubbin back!)
It wasn't even funny。 He would have backed off before he even cleared Boulder
if it hadn't been for his pulsion that the boy was in terrible trouble。 Even
now a small voice in the back of his skull — more the voice of reason than of
cowardice; he thought — was telling him to hole up in an Estes Park motel for the
night and wait for the plows to at least expose the center stripe again。 That
voice kept reminding him of the jet's shaky landing at Stapleton; of that
sinking feeling that it was going to e in nose…first; delivering its
passengers to the gates of hell rather than at Gate 39; Concourse B。 But reason
would not stand against the pulsion。 It had to be today。 The snowstorm was
his own bad luck。 He would have to cope with it。 He was afraid that if he
didn't; he might have something much worse to cope with in his dreams。
The wind gusted again; this time from the northeast; a little English on the
ball if you please; and he was again cut off from the vague shapes of the hills
and even from the embankments on either side of the road。 He was driving through
white null。
And then the high sodium lights of the snowplow loomed out of the soup;
bearing down; and to his horror he saw that instead of being to one side; the
Buick's nose was pointed directly between those headlamps。 The plow was being
none too choosy about keeping its own side of the road; and Hallorann had
allowed the Buick to drift。
The grinding roar of the plow's diesel engine intruded over the bellow of the
wind; and then the sound of its airhorn; hard; long; almost deafening。
Hallorann's testicles turned into two small wrinkled sacs filled with shaved
ice。 His guts seemed to have been transformed into a large mass of Silly Putty。
Color was materializing out of the white now; snow…clotted orange。 He could
see the high cab; even the gesticulating figure of the driver behind the single
long wiper blade。 He could see the V shape of the plow's wing blades; spewing
more snow up onto the road's left…hand embankment like pallid; smoking exhaust。
WHAAAAAAAAA! the airhorn bellowed indignantly。
He squeezed the accelerator like the breast of a muchloved woman and the Buick
scooted forward and toward the right。 There was no embankment over here; the
plows headed up instead of down had only to push the snow directly over the
drop。
(The drop; ah yes; the drop — )
The wingblades on Hallorann's left; fully four feet higher than the Electra's
roof; flirted by with no more than an inch or two to spare。 Until the plow had
actually cleared him; Hallorann had thought a crash inevitable。 A prayer which
was half an inarticulate apology to the boy flitted through his mind like a torn
rag。
Then the plow was past; its revolving blue lights glinting and flashing in
Hallorann's rearview mirror。
He jockeyed the Buick's steering wheel back to the left; but nothing doing。
The scoot had turned into a skid; and the Buick was floating dreamily toward the
lip of the drop; spurning snow from under its mudguards。
He flicked the wheel back the other way; in the skid's direction; and the
car's front and rear began to s places。 Panicked now; he pumped the brake
hard; and then felt a hard bump。 In front of him the road was gone 。。。 he was
looking into a bottomless chasm of swirling snow and vague greenish…gray pines
far away and far below。
(I'm going holy mother of Jesus I'm going off)
And that was where the car stopped; canting forward at a thirty…degree angle;
the left fender jammed against a guardrail; the rear wheels nearly off the
ground。 When Hallorann tried reverse; the wheels only spun helplessly。 His heart
was doing a Gene Krupa drumroll。
He got out — very carefully he got out — and went around to the Buick's back
deck。
He was standing there; looking at the back wheels helplessly; when a cheerful
voice behind him said: 〃Hello there; fella。 You must be shit right out of your
mind。〃
He turned around and saw the plow forty yards further down the road; obscured
in the blowing snow except for the raftered dark brown streak of its exhaust and
the revolving blue lights on top。 The driver was standing just behind him;
dressed in a long sheepskin coat and a slicker over it。 A blue…and…white
pinstriped engineer's cap was perched on his head; and Hallorann could hardly
believe it was staying on in the teeth of the wind。
(Glue。 It sure…God must be glue。)
〃Hi;〃 he said。 〃Can you pull me back onto the road?〃
〃Oh; I guess I could;〃 the plow driver said。 〃What the hell you doing way up
here; mister? Good way to kill your ass。〃
〃Urgent business。〃
〃Nothin is that urgent;〃 the plow driver said slowly and kindly; as if
speaking to a mental defective。 〃If you'd 'a hit that post a leetle mite harder;
nobody woulda got you out till All Fools' Day。 Don't e from these parts; do
you?〃
〃No。 And I wouldn't be here unless my business was as urgent as I say。〃
〃That so?〃 The driver shifted his stance panionably as if they were having
a desultory chat on the back steps instead of standing in a blizzard halfway
between hoot and holler; with Hallorann's car balanced three hundred feet above
the tops of the trees below。
〃Where you headed? Estes?〃
〃No; a place called the Overlook Hotel;〃 Hallorann said。 〃It's a little way
above Sidewinder — 〃
But the driver was shaking his head dolefully。
〃I guess I know well enough where that is;〃 he said。 〃Mister; you'll never get
up to the old Overlook。 Roads between Estes Park and Sidewinder is bloody damn
hell。 It's driftin in right behind us no matter how hard we push。 I e through
drifts a few miles back that was damn near six feet through the middle。 And even
if you could make Sidewinder; why; the road's closed from there all the way
across to Buckland; Utah。 Nope。〃 He shook his head。 〃Never make it; mister。
Never make it at all。〃
〃I have to try;〃 Hallorann said; calling on his last reserves of patience to
keep his