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Chapter Excerpt
Chapter One
Somebody Else in the Vehicle
said the attorney-type into his cell phone. He wiped the wet from his face.
"There must be. It's in the carpool lane." He listened, squinting,
and motioned to Winnie: Stop. Don't open the car door yet. Already,
other drivers were slowing down to rubberneck. "Where are we, Braintree,
Quincy? On 93 north, anyway, a half mile beyond the junction with 128. Yes, I
know enough not to move anyone, but I'm telling you, you'll have a hell of a
time getting an ambulance through, what with rush hour — there'll be a backup
a mile long before you know it."
He listened again. Then, "Right. I'll look. Two or more, maybe."
Returning from a few quiet days on Cape Cod, Winifred Rudge had missed her
turnoff west and gotten stuck on the JFK toward Boston. Woolgathering, nail
biting, something. Focus was a problem. Late for her appointment, she'd
considered the odds: in this weather, what were her chances of being ticketed
for violating the diamond lane's two-riders-or-more rule? Limited. She'd risked
it. So she'd been at the right place on the downgrade to see the whole thing,
despite the poor visibility. She'd watched the top third of a white pine snap
in the high winds. Even from a half mile away, she'd noticed how the wood flesh
had sprung out in diagonal striations, like nougat against rain-blackened bark.
The crown of the tree twisted, then tilted. The wind had caught under the
tree's parasol limbs and carried it across three lanes of slow-moving traffic,
flinging it onto the hood and the roof of a northbound Subaru in the carpool
lane. The driver of the Subaru, four cars ahead of Winnie, had braked too hard
and hydroplaned left against the Jersey barriers. The evasive action hadn't
helped.
Winnie had managed to tamp her brakes and avoid adding to the collection of
crumpled fenders and popped hoods. She had been the first out in the rain, the
first to start poking through dark rafts of pine needles. Mr. Useful Cell Phone
was next, having emerged from some vehicle behind her. He carried a ridiculous
out-blown umbrella, and when he got off the phone with the 911 operator he
hooked the umbrella handle around a good-size tree limb and tried to yank it
away.
"They said don't touch the passengers," he yelled through the
rain.
Afraid her voice would betray her panic, she didn't even like to answer, but
to reassure him she managed to say, "I know that much." The smell of
pine boughs, sap on her, hands, water on her face. What was she scared of
finding in that dark vehicle? But the prime virtue of weather is immediacy, and
the wind tore away the spicy Christmas scent. In its place, a vegetable stink
of cheap spilled gasoline. "We may have to get them out, do you
smell that?" she shouted, and redoubled her efforts. They could use help;
where were the other commuters? Just sitting in their cars, listening to hear
themselves mentioned on the WGBH traffic report?
"Cars don't blow up like in the movies," he said, motioning her to
take a position farther along the tree trunk. "Put your back against it
and push; I'll pull. One. Two. Three." Thanks mostly to gravity they
managed to dislodge the thing a foot or so, enough to reveal the windshield. It
was still holding, though crazed into opacity with the impact. The driver, a fiftyish
sack of a woman, was slanted against a net bag of volleyballs in the passenger
seat. She didn't look lucky. The car had slammed up against the concrete
barrier so tightly that both doors on the driver's side were blocked.
"Isn't there someone else?" said Winnie. "Didn't you
say?"
"You know, I think that is gasoline. Maybe we better stand off."
Winnie made her way along the passenger side of the car, through branches
double-jointed with rubbery muscle. The rear door was locked and the front door
was locked. She peered through pine needles, around sports equipment.
"There's a booster seat in the back," she yelled. "Break the
window, can you?"
The umbrella handle wasn't strong enough. Winnie had nothing useful in her
purse or her overnight bag. The cold rain made gluey boils on the windows. It
was impossible to see in. "No car could catch on fire in a storm like
this," she said. "Is that smoke, or just burned rubber from the brake
pads?" But then another driver appeared, carrying a crowbar. "Smash
the window," she told him.
"Hurry," said Cell Phone Man. "Do they automatically send
fire engines, do you think?"
"Do it," she said. The newcomer, an older man in a Red Sox cap
faded to pink, obliged. The window shattered, spraying glassy baby teeth. As she
clawed for the recessed lock in the rear door, Winnie heard the mother begin to
whimper. The door creaked open and more metal scraped. Winnie lurched and
sloped herself in. The child strapped into the booster seat was too large for
it. Her legs were thrown up in ungainly angles. "Maybe we can unlatch the
whole contraption and drag it out," said Winnie, mostly to herself; she
knew her voice wouldn't carry in the wind. She leaned over the child in the
car's dark interior, into a hollow against which pine branches bunched on three
sides. She fumbled for the buckle of the seat belt beneath the molded plastic
frame of the booster. Then she gave up and pulled out, and slammed the door.
"I'll get it," said Red Sox Fan, massing up.
"They said leave everybody where they were," said Cell Phone,
"you could snap a spine and do permanent damage."
"No spine in her," said Winnie. "It's a life-size..."
The foregoing is excerpted from Lost by Gregory Maguire. All
rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced without written
permission from HarperCollins Publishers, 10 East 53rd Street, New
York, NY 10022
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