Junior succeeded in going from the moving finger to his nose once. Then he hit the finger but touched his cheek instead.The third time he missed the finger and touched his right eyebrow. 'Booya. Want more? I can do it all day, you know.'
Rusty pushed his chair back and stood up. 'I'm going to send Ginny Tomlinson in with a prescription for you.'
'After I get it, can I go roam? Home, I mean?'
'You're staying overnight with us, Junior. For observation.'
'But I'm all right, aren't I? I had one of my headaches before—I mean a real blinder—but it's gone. I'm okay, right?'
'I can't tell you anything right now,' Rusty said. 'I want to talk with Thurston Marshall and look at some books.'
'Man, that guy's no doctor. He's an English teacher.'
'Maybe so, but he treated you okay Better than you and Frank treated him, is my understanding.'
Junior waved a dismissing hand. 'We were just playin. Besides, we treated those rids kite, didn't we?'
'Can't argue with you there. For now, Junior, just relax. Watch some TV,—why don't you?'
Junior considered this, then asked, 'What's for supper?'
6
Under the circumstances, the only thing Rusty could think of to reduce the swelling in what passed for Junior Rennie's brain was IV mannitol. He pulled the chart out of the door and saw a note attached to it in an unfamiliar looping scrawl:
'Dear Dr Everett: What do you think about mannitol for
this patient? I cannot order, have no idea of the correct amount.
Thurse
Rusty jotted down the dose. Ginny was right; Thurston Marshall was good.
7
The door to Big Jim's room was open, but the room was empty. Rusty heard the man's voice coming from, the late Dr Haskell's favorite snoozery. Rusty walked down to the lonnge. He did not think to take Big Jim's chart, an oversight he would come to regret.
Big Jim was fully dressed and sitting by the window with his phone to his ear, even though the sign on the wall showed a bright red cell phone with a red X over it for the reading-impaired. Rusty thought it would give him great pleasure to order Big Jim to terminate his call. It might not be the most politic way to start what was going to be a combination exam-discussion, but he meant to do it. He started forward, then stopped. Cold.
A clear memory arose: not being able to sleep, getting up for a piece of Linda's cranberry-orange bread, hearing Audrey whining softly from the girls' room. Going down there to check the Js. Sitting on Jannie's bed beneath Hannah Montana, her guardian angel.
Why had this memory been so slow in coming? Why not during his meeting with Big Jim, in Big Jim's home study?
Because then I didn't know about the murders; I was fixated on the propane. And because Janelle wasn't having a seizure, she was just in REM sleep. Talking in her sleep.
He has a golden baseball, Daddy. It's a bad baseball.
Even last night, in the mortuary, that memory hadn't resurfaced. Only now, when it was half-past too late.
But think what it means: that gadget up on Black Ridge may only be putting out limited radiation, but it's broadcasting something else. Call it induced precognition, call it something that doesn't even have a name, but whatever you call it, it's there. And ifjannie was right about the golden baseball, then all the kids who've been making Sybil-like pronouncements about a Halloween disaster may be right, too. But does it mean on that exact day? Or could it be earlier?
Rusty thought the latter. For a townful of kids overexcited about trick-or-treating, it was Halloween already.
'I don't care what you've got on, Stewart,' Big Jim was saying. Three milligrams of Valium didn't seem to have mellowed him out; he sounded as fabulously grumpy as ever. 'You and Fernald get up there, and take Roger with y… huh? What?' He listened.'I shouldn't even have to tell you. Haven't you been watching the cotton-picking TV? If he gives you any sass, you—'
He looked up and saw Rusty in the doorway. For just a moment Big Jim had the startled look of a man replaying his conversation and trying to decide how much the newcomer might have overheard.
'Stewart, someone's here. I'll get back to you, and when I do, you better tell me what I want to hear.' He broke the connection without saying goodbye, held the phone up to Rusty, and bared his small upper teeth in a smile. 'I know, I know, very naughty, but town business won't wait.' He sighed. 'It's not easy to be the one everybody's depending on, especially when you're not feeling well.'
'Must be difficult,' Rusty agreed.
'God helps me. Would you like to know the philosophy I live by, pal?'
No. 'Sure.'
'When God closes a door, He opens a window.'
'Do you think so?'
'I know so. And the one thing I always try to remember is that when you pray for what you want, God turns a deaf ear. But when you pray for what you need, He's all ears.'