tibetanmethod (
tibetanmethod) wrote2006-12-02 02:32 am
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Heidi is working the night shift tonight, as she has been for the last several weeks. Norma Jennings is in Brazil, and that means that Shelly -- Norma's second in command at the Double R Diner -- needs to be around during the day.
She looks up as the bell on the door jingles; Cooper is holding it open for Moiraine. He gestures to a booth on the lefthand side, and they take a seat.
When Heidi makes her way over, Cooper and Moiraine find out that today is a special on cherry pie, since cherries are in season. Also, there is peanut butter.
Cooper leans forward and says to Moiraine, very confidentially, "I recommend the cherry."
She looks up as the bell on the door jingles; Cooper is holding it open for Moiraine. He gestures to a booth on the lefthand side, and they take a seat.
When Heidi makes her way over, Cooper and Moiraine find out that today is a special on cherry pie, since cherries are in season. Also, there is peanut butter.
Cooper leans forward and says to Moiraine, very confidentially, "I recommend the cherry."
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Mildly: "I very much doubt that he is."
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"Do you have some idea as to what may be, then?"
Her tone is perfectly calm, nearly academic in terms of interest.
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Simply.
It's why they're having this conversation to begin with.
"I don't."
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"Then, if you would have me do so, I shall look into it as best I can, Dale."
It is possible that she would do so without his agreement, but perhaps that may not be necessary.
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"I shall do what I may."
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Outsiders.
"Thank you," Cooper says, quietly, and wonders just how bad it's going to be when he tells Harry that he's gone over Harry's head, in the service of what's really Harry's town, because of Harry's dead girlfriend.
Who isn't dead.
Who shot Cooper and left him for dead.
Cooper's pretty sure that Harry can't afford to have him leave town, what with Sheriff Cable and the boys from Deer Meadow gunning for him and his. Pretty sure isn't good enough.
He's having to drive slowly down the dirt road, where weeds grow in between the two grooves made by wheels. Cooper reaches down and rolls down the window, and breathes in, deeply. "Smell that," he says, soft. "You don't get trees quite like these anywhere else."
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"It is a truly distinctive scent," she agrees quietly.
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Cooper puts on the brakes.
It's the Log Lady, up where the road widens, leading to a clearing with a small cabin.
A silhouette is visible through a window. Curtains flutter briefly. The person inside isn't visible.
The Log Lady stands there, looking at them.
"Moiraine," Cooper says, and he doesn't raise his voice, "do you know what's wrong with this picture?"
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"Although then she favored the companionship of a piece of wood, as I recall."
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The car begins to move slowly.
"Is she still the Log Lady if she doesn't have it? Or is she someone else?"
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"Does she not have a name, as well?"
It is almost a rhetorical question. Almost.
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Cooper puts the car in park and turns off the engine. The Log Lady has gone into the house.
The door is open, and light spills out onto the porch.
"If her husband has a name, I've never heard it. Or read it."
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Introductions had been rather lacking at the time, for a variety of reasons.
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Distant.
"In a fire, in the woods. He met the devil. Fire is the devil hiding like a coward in the smoke. That's what she said."
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"I have heard others speak in less clear descriptive terms, for good reason."
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"That is a reason, to be certain. The Dark One's true name, for example, is not spoken save by those foolish enough to wish to draw his attention."
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His eyes are on the rectangle of light, spilling out of the open door.
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She's not holding her log.
"You're late," the Log Lady says.
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"As it happens, I am pleased to see you again, Margaret."
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