Dolan's Cadillac

Dolan's Cadillac Read Online Free PDF Page A

Book: Dolan's Cadillac Read Online Free PDF
Author: Stephen King
into it.
    Moving quickly - I didn't want to be seen at this - I got out of the van and quickly stacked up some dozen of the road
    cones, creating a lane wide enough for the van. I dragged the ROAD CLOSED Sign to the right, then ran back to the
    van, got in, and drove through the gap.
    Now I could hear an approaching motor.
    I grabbed the cones again, replacing them as fast as I could. Two of them spilled out of my hands and rolled down
    into the gully. I chased after them, panting. I tripped over a rock in the dark, fell sprawling, and got up quickly with
    dust on my face and blood dripping from one palm. The car was closer now; soon it would appear over the last rise
    before the detour-junction and in the glow thrown by his high beams the driver would see a man in jeans and a
    tee-shirt trying to replace road cones while his van stood idling where no vehicle that didn't belong to the Nevada
    State Highway Department was supposed to be. I got the last cone in place and ran back to the sign. I tugged too
    hard. It swayed and almost fell over.
    As the approaching car's headlights began to brighten on the rise to the east, I suddenly became convinced it was a
    Nevada State Trooper.
    The sign was back where it had been - and if it wasn't, it was close enough. I sprinted for the van, got in, and drove
    over the next rise. just as I cleared it, I saw headlights splash over the rise behind me.
    Had he seen me in the dark, with my own lights out?
    I didn't think so.
    I sat back against the seat, eyes closed, waiting for my heart to slow down. At last, as the sound of the car bouncing
    and bucketing its way down the detour faded out, it did.
    I was here - safe behind the detour.
    It was time to get to work.
    Beyond the rise, the road descended to a long, straight flat. Two-thirds of the way along this straight stretch the road
    simply ceased to exist - it was replaced by piles of dirt and a long, wide stretch of crushed gravel.
    Would they see that and stop? Turn around? Or would they keep on going, confident that there must be an approved
    way through since they had not seen any detour signs?
    Too late to worry about it now.
    I picked a spot about twenty yards into the flat, but still a quarter of a mile short of the place where the road dissolved.
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    I pulled over to the side of the road, worked my way into the back of the van, and opened the back doors. I slid out a
    couple of boards and muscled the equipment. Then I rested and looked up at the cold desert stars.
    'Here we go, Elizabeth,' I whispered to them.
    It seemed I felt a cold hand stroke the back of my neck.
    The compressor made a racket and the jackhammer was even worse, but there was no help for it - the best I could
    hope for was to be done with the first stage of the work before midnight. If it went on much longer than that I was
    going to be in trouble anyway, because I had only a limited quantity of gasoline for the compressor.
    Never mind. Don't think of who might be listening and wondering what fool would be running a jackhammer in the
    middle of the night; think about Dolan. Think about the gray Sedan DeVille.
    Think about the arc of descent.
    I marked off the dimensions of the grave first, using white chalk, the tape measure from my toolbox, and the figures my
    mathematician friend had worked out. When I was done, a rough rectangle not quite five feet wide by forty-two feet
    long glimmered in the dark. At the nearer end it flared wide. In the gloom that flare did not look so much like a funnel as
    it had on the graph paper where my mathematician friend first sketched it. In the gloom it looked like a gaping mouth at
    the end of the long, straight windpipe. All the better to eat you with, my dear, I thought, and smiled in the dark.
    I drew twenty more lines across the box, making stripes two feet wide. Last, I drew a single vertical line down the
    middle, creating a grid of fortytwo
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