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                    All You Love Will Be Carried Away              
                              By Steven King                       
       
                              (part 2 of 7)                        
       
       He stood where he was a  moment longer, waiting for the wind
       to drop.  It did, and he  could see the spark  lights again.
       The farmhouse. And was it possible that behind those lights,
       some farmer's wife was even now heating up a pot of Cottager
       Split Pea Soup or  perhaps microwaving a Cottager Shepherd's
       Pie or Chicken Francais? It was. It was as possible as hell.
       While her husband watched the  early news with his shoes off
       and  his sock  feet on  a  hassock, and  overhead their  son
       played a  video game on  his PlayStation and  their daughter
       sat in the tub, chin_deep in fragrant bubbles, her hair tied
       up  with a  ribbon, reading"The  Golden Compass,"  by Philip
       Pullman, or  perhaps one  of the  Harry Potter  books, which
       were favorites of Alfie's  daughter, Carlene. All that going
       on behind  the spark  lights, some family's  universal joint
       turning smoothly  in its  socket, but  between them  and the
       edge  of this  parking lot  was a  mile and  a half  of flat
       field,  white  in  the  running_away light  of  a  low  sky,
       comatose  with the  season. Alfie  briefly imagined  himself
       walking into that field in  his city shoes, his briefcase in
       one  hand and  his suitcase  in the  other, working  his way
       across the  frozen furrows, finally arriving,  knocking; the
       door would be opened and he  would smell pea soup, that good
       hearty smell, and  hear the KETV (ABC)  meteorologist in the
       other room saying, "But now look at this low_pressure system
       just coming over the Rockies."
       
       And what would Alfie say to  the farmer's wife? That he just
       dropped by for  dinner? Would he advise her  to save Russian
       Jews,  collect valuable  prizes? Would  he begin  by saying,
       "Ma'am, according to at least one source I've read recently,
       all that  you love will  be carried  away?" That would  be a
       good conversation opener, sure to interest the farmer's wife
       in the  wayfaring stranger  who had  just walked  across her
       husband's  east field  to knock  on her  door. And  when she
       invited him to step in, to  tell her more, he could open his
       briefcase  and  give  her  a couple  of  his  sample  books,
       tell  her that  once she  discovered the  Cottager brand  of
       quick_serve  gourmet delicacies  she would  almost certainly
       want to  move on to  the more sophisticated pleasures  of Ma
       Mere. And, by the way, did she have a taste for caviar? Many
       did. Even in Nebraska.
       
       Freezing. Standing here and freezing.
       
       He turned from the field and the spark lights at the far end
       of it and walked to the  motel, moving in careful duck steps
       so  he wouldn't  go  ass over  tea kettle.  He  had done  it
       before,  God knew.  Whoops_a_daisy in  half a  hundred motel
       parking lots. He  had done most of it  before, actually, and
       supposed that was at least part of the problem.
       
       There was  an overhang,  so he  was able to  get out  of the
       snow.  There was  a Coke  machine with  a sign  saying, "Use
       Correct Change." There was an ice machine and a Snax machine
       with candy  bars and  various kinds  of potato  chips behind
       curls of  metal like bedsprings.  There was no  "Use Correct
       Change" sign on the Snax machine.  From the room to the left
       of the  one where he  intended to kill himself,  Alfie could
       hear  the early  news, but  it  would sound  better in  that
       farmhouse over yonder, he was sure of that. The wind boomed.
       Snow  swirled around  his  city shoes,  and  then Alfie  let
       himself into his room. The light  switch was to the left. He
       turned it on and shut the door.
       
       He knew  the room;  it was  the room of  his dreams.  It was
       square. The  walls were  white. On  one was  a picture  of a
       small boy in a straw hat,  asleep with a fishing pole in his
       hand. There was a green rug  on the floor, a quarter inch of
       some nubbly synthetic stuff. It  was cold in here right now,
       but when he  pushed the Hi Heat button on  the control panel
       of the Climatron beneath the  window the place would warm up
       fast. Would probably become hot. A counter ran the length of
       one wall. There was a TV on it. On top of the TV was a piece
       of cardboard with "One_Touch Movies!" printed on it.
       
       There were  twin double beds, each  covered with bright_gold
       spreads  that had  been tucked  under the  pillows and  then
       pulled over them,  so the pillows looked  like small covered
       corpses. There  was a table  between the beds with  a Gideon
       Bible, a TV_channel guide, and  a flesh_colored phone on it.
       Beyond the second bed was the door to the bathroom. When you
       turned on the  light in there, the fan would  go on, too. If
       you wanted the light, you got the fan, too. There was no way
       around it. The  light itself would be  fluorescent, with the
       ghosts of dead flies inside.  On the counter beside the sink
       there  would be  a hot  plate and  a Proctor_Silex  electric
       kettle and  little packets  of instant  coffee. There  was a
       smell in here, the mingling of some harsh cleaning fluid and
       mildew  on the  shower curtain.  Alfie knew  it all.  He had
       dreamed it  right down  to the  green rug,  but that  was no
       accomplishment,  it  was an  easy  dream.  He thought  about
       turning  on the  heater, but  that would  rattle, too,  and,
       besides, what was the point?
       
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