“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.”
3
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.