Stephen King - The Mist

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The morning after a violent thunderstorm, a thick unnatural mist rapidly spreads across the small town of Bridgton, Maine, reducing visibility to near-zero and concealing numerous species of bizarre creatures which viciously attack any human who ventures out into the open. The source of the fog and its inhabitants is never revealed, but strong allusions are made to an interdimensional rift caused by something known second-hand to the townsfolk as "The Arrowhead Project", long rumored to be conducted at a nearby top-secret military facility.

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«Regulations don't change,» Brown said smugly. «I'll see that the company hears of it. That's my responsibility.»

Norton, meanwhile, had skittered away and stood at some distance, trying to straighten his shirt and smooth back his hair. His eyes darted between Brown and me nervously.

«Hey!» Ollie cried suddenly, raising his voice and producing a bass thunder I never would have suspected from this large but soft and unassuming man. «Hey! Everybody in the store! You want to come up back and hear this! It concerns all of you!» He looked at me levelly, ignoring Brown altogether. «Am I doing all right?»

«Fine.»

People began to gather. The original knot of spectators to my argument with Norton doubled, then trebled.

«There's something you all had better know-» Ollie began.

«You put that beer down right now,» Brown said.

«You shut up right now,» I said, and took a step toward him.

Brown took a compensatory step back. «I don't know what some of you think you are doing,» he said, «but I can tell you it's going to be reported to the Federal Foods Company! All of it! And I want you to understand-there may be charges!» His lips drew nervously back from his yellowed teeth, and I could feel sympathy for him. Just trying to cope; that was all he was doing. As Norton was by imposing a mental gag order on himself. Myron and Jim had tried by turning the whole thing into a macho charade-if the generator could be fixed, the mist would blow over. This was Brown's way. He was Protecting the Store.

«Then you go ahead and take down the names,» I said. «But please don't talk.»

«I'll take down plenty of names,» he responded. «Yours will be head on the list, you … you bohemian.»

«Mr. David Drayton has got something to tell you,» Ollie said, «and I think you had better all listen up, in case you were planning on going home.»

So I told them what had happened, pretty much as I told Norton. There was some laughter at first, then a deepening uneasiness as I finished.

«It's a lie, you know,» Norton said. His voice tried for hard emphasis and overshot into stridency. This was the man I'd told first, hoping to enlist his credibility. What a balls-up.

«Of course it's a lie,» Brown agreed. «It's lunacy. Where do you suppose those tentacles came from, Mr. Drayton?»

«I don't know, and at this point, that's not even a very important question. They're here. There's-»

«I suspect they came out of a few of those beer cans. That's what I suspect.» This got some appreciative laughter. It was silenced by the strong, rusty-hinge voice of Mrs. Carmody.

«Death!» she cried, and those who had been laughing quickly sobered.

She marched into the center of the rough circle that had formed, her canary pants seeming to give off a light of their own, her huge purse swinging against one elephantine thigh. Her black eyes glanced arrogantly around, as sharp and balefully sparkling as a magpie's. Two good-looking girls of about sixteen with CAMP WOODLANDS written on the back of their white rayon shirts shrank away from her.

«You listen but you don't hear! You hear but you don't believe! Which one of you wants to go outside and see for himself?» Her eyes swept them, and then fell on me. «And just what do you propose to do about it, Mr. David Drayton? What do you think you can do about it?»

She grinned, skull-like above her canary outfit.

«It's the end, I tell you. The end of everything. It's the Last Times. The moving finger has writ, not in fire, but in lines of mist. The earth has opened and spewed forth its abominations-»

«Can't you make her shut up?» one of the teenage girls burst out. She was beginning to cry. «She's scaring me!»

«Are you scared, dearie?» Mrs. Carmody asked, and turned on her. «You aren't scared now, no. But when the foul creatures the imp has loosed upon the face of the earth come for you-»

«That's enough now, Mrs. Carmody,» Ollie said, taking her arm. «That's just fine.»

«You let go of me! It's the end, I tell you! It's death! Death!»

«It's a pile of shit,» a man in a fishing hat and glasses said disgustedly.

«No, sir,» Myron spoke up. «I know it sounds like something out of a dope-dream, but it's the flat-out truth. I saw it myself.»

«I did, too,» Jim said.

«And me,» Ollie chipped in. He had succeeded in quieting Mrs. Carmody, at least for the time being. But she stood close by, clutching her big purse and grinning her crazy grin. No one wanted to stand too close to her-they muttered among themselves, not liking the corroboration. Several of them looked back at the big plate-glass windows in an uneasy, speculative way. I was glad to see it.

«Lies,» Norton said. «You people all lie each other up. That's all.»

«What you're suggesting is totally beyond belief,» Brown said.

«We don't have to stand here chewing it over,» I told him. «Come back into the storage area with me. Take a look. And a listen.»

«Customers are not allowed in the-»

«Bud,» Ollie said, «go with him. Let's settle this.»

«All right,» Brown said. «Mr. Drayton? Let's get this foolishness over with.»

We pushed through the double doors into the darkness.

The sound was unpleasant-perhaps evil.

Brown felt it, too, for all his hardheaded Yankee manner; his hand clutched my arm immediately, his breath caught for a moment and then resumed more harshly.

It was a low whispering sound from the direction of the loading door-an almost caressing sound. I swept around gently with one foot and finally struck one of the flashlights. I bent down, got it, and turned it on. Brown's face was tightly drawn, and he hadn't even seen them-he was only hearing them. But I had seen, and I could imagine them twisting and climbing over the corrugated steel surface of the door like living vines.

«What do you think now? Totally beyond belief?»

Brown licked his lips and looked at the littered confusion of boxes and bags. «They did this?»

«Some of it. Most of it. Come over here.»

He came-reluctantly. I spotted the flashlight on the shriveled and curled section of tentacle, still lying by the push broom. Brown bent toward it.

«Don't touch that,» I said. «It may still be alive.»

He straightened up quickly. I picked up the broom by the bristles and prodded the tentacle. The third or fourth poke caused it to unclench sluggishly and reveal two whole suckers and a ragged segment of a third. Then the fragment coiled again with muscular speed and lay still. Brown made a gagging, disgusted sound.

«Seen enough?»

«Yes,» he said. «Let's get out of here.»

We followed the bobbing light back to the double doors and pushed through them. All the faces turned toward us, and the hum of conversation died. Norton's face was like old cheese. Mrs. Carmody's black eyes glinted. Ollie was drinking beer; his face was still running with trickles of perspiration, although it had gotten rather chilly in the market. The two girls with CAMP WOODLANDS on their shirts were huddled together like young horses before a thunderstorm. Eyes. So many eyes. I could paint them, I thought with a chill. No faces, only eyes in the gloom. I could paint them but no one would believe they were real.

Bud Brown folded his long-fingered hands primly in front of him. «People,» he said. «It appears we have a problem of some magnitude here.»

VI. Further Discussion. Mrs. Carmody. Fortifications. What Happened to the Flat- Earth Society.

The next four hours passed in a kind of dream. There was a long and semihysterical discussion following Brown's confirmation, or maybe the discussion wasn't as long as it seemed; maybe it was just the grim necessity of people chewing over the same information, trying to see if from every possible point of view, working it the way a dog works a bone, trying to get at the marrow. It was a slow coming to belief. You can see the same thing at any New England town meeting in March.

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