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ative survivor who spent so much of his time in a tiresome state of physical disfort and mental confusion。 For that moment he was some other Jonesy; an invisible presence looking at a gunman standing on a platform in a tree。 The gunman's hair was short and already graying; his face lined around the mouth; beard…speckled on the cheeks; and haggard。 The gunman was on the verge of using his weapon。 Snow had begun to dance around his head and light on his untucked brown flannel shirt; and he was on the verge of shooting a man in an orange cap and vest of the very sort he would have been wearing himself if he had elected to go into the woods with the Beaver instead of up into this tree。
He fell back into himself with a thud; exactly as one fell back into one's seat after taking a car over a bad bump at a high speed。 To his horror; he realized he was still tracking the man below with the Garand; as if some stubborn alligator deep in his brain refused to let go of the idea that the man in the brown coat was prey。 Worse; he couldn't seem to make his finger relax on the rifle's trigger。 There was even an awful second or two when he thought he was actually still squeezing; inexorably eating up those last few ounces between him and the greatest mistake of his life。 He later came to accept that that at least had been an illusion; something akin to the feeling you get of rolling backward in your stopped car when you glimpse a slowly moving car beside you; out of the corner of your eye。
No; he was just frozen; but that was bad enough; that was hell。 Jonesy; you think too much; Pete liked to say when he caught Jonesy staring out into the middle distance; no longer tracking the conversation; and what he probably meant was Jonesy; you imagine too much; and that was very likely true。 Certainly he was imagining too much now as he stood up here in the middle of the tree and the season's first snow; hair leaping up in tufts; finger locked on the Garand's trigger … not tightening still; as he had for a moment feared; but not loosening; either; the man almost below him now; the Garand's gunsight on the top of the orange cap; the man's life on an invisible wire between the Garand's muzzle and that cap; the man maybe thinking about trading his car or cheating on his wife or buying his oldest daughter a pony (Jonesy later had reason to know McCarthy had been thinking about none of those things; but of course not then; not in the tree with his forefinger a frozen curl around the trigger of his rifle) and not knowing what Jonesy had not known as he stood on the curb in Cambridge with his briefcase in one hand and a copy of the Boston Phoenix under his arm; namely that death was in the neighborhood; or perhaps even Death; a hurrying figure like something escaped from an early Ingmar Bergman film; something carrying a concealed implement in the coarse folds of its robe。 Scissors; perhaps。 Or a scalpel。
And the worst of it was that the man would not die; or at least not at once。 He would fall down and lie there screaming; as Jonesy had lain screaming in the street。 He couldn't remember screaming; but of course he had; he had been told this and had no reason to disbelieve it。 Screamed his fucking head off; most likely。 And what if the man in the brown coat and orange accessories started screaming for Marcy? Surely he would not … not really … but Jonesy's mind might report screams of Marcy。 If there was eye…fever … if he could look at a man's brown coat and see it as a deer's head … then there was likely the auditory equivalent; as well。 To hear a man screaming and know you were the reason … dear God; no。 And still his finger would not loosen。
What broke his paralysis was both simple and unexpected: about ten paces from the base of Jonesy's tree; the man in the brown coat fell down。 Jonesy heard the pained; surprised sound he made … mrof! was what it sounded like … and his finger released the trigger without his even thinking about it。
The man was down on his hands and knees; his brown…gloved fingers (brown gloves; another mistake; this guy almost could have gone out with a sign reading SHOOT ME taped to his back; Jonesy thought) spread on the ground; which had already begun to whiten。 As the man got up again; he began to speak aloud in a fretful; wondering voice。 Jonesy didn't realize at first that he was also weeping。
'Oh dear; oh dear;' the man said as he worked his way back to a standing position。 He swayed on his feet as if drunk。 Jonesy knew that men in the woods; men away from their families for a week or a weekend; got up to all sorts of small wickedness … drinking at ten in the morning was one of the most mon。 But Jonesy didn't think this guy was drunk。 No reason; just a vibe。
'Oh dear; oh dear; oh dear。' And then; as he began to walk again: 'Snow。 Now it's snow。 Please God; oh God; now it's snow; oh dear。'
His first couple of steps were lurching and unsure。 Jonesy had about decided that his vibe was incorrect; the guy was loaded; and then the fellow's gait smoothed out and he began to walk a little more evenly。 He was scratching at his right cheek。
He passed directly beneath the stand; for a moment he wasn't a man at all but only a round circle of orange cap with brown shoulders to either side of it。 His voice drifted up; liquid and full of tears; mostly Oh dear with the occasional Oh God or Now it's snow thrown in for salt。
Jonesy stood where he was; watching as the guy first disappeared directly beneath the stand; then came out on the other side。 He pivoted without being aware of it to keep the plodding man in view … nor was he aware that he had lowered his rifle to his side; even pausing long enough to put the safety back on。
Jonesy didn't call out; and he supposed he knew why: simple guilt。 He was afraid that the man down there would take one look at him and see the truth in Jonesy's eyes … even through his tears and the thickening snow; the man would see that Jonesy had been up there with his gun pointed; that Jonesy had almost shot him。
Twenty paces beyond the tree; the man stopped and only stood there; his gloved right hand raised to his brow; shielding his eyes from the snow。 Jonesy realized he had seen Hole in the Wall。 Had probably realized he was on an actual path; too。 Oh dear and Oh God stopped; and the guy began to run toward the sound of the generator; rocking from side to side like a man on the deck of a ship。 Jonesy could hear the stranger's short; sharp gasps for breath as he pounded toward the roomy cabin with the lazy curl of smoke rising from the chimney and fading almost at once into the snow。
Jonesy began to work his way down the rungs nailed to the trunk of the maple with his gun slung over his shoulder (the thought that the man might present some sort of danger did not occur to him; not then; he simply didn't want to leave the Garand; which was a fine gun; out in the snow)。 His hip had stiffened; and by the time he got to the foot of the tree; the man he'd almost shot had made it nearly all the way to the cabin door 。 。 。 which was unlocked; of course。 No one locked up; not way out here。
5
About ten feet from the granite slab that served as Hole in the Wall