In spite of Hatch's best efforts, the Honda began to slide. The tail
end came around to the left, and Lindsey found herself swinging away
from the stranded truck. The smooth, greasy, out-of control motion was
like the transition between scenes in a bad dream. Her stomach twisted
with nausea, and although she was restrained by a safety harness, she
instinctively pressed her right hand against the door and her left
against the dashboard, bracing herself.
"Hang on," Hatch said, turning the wheel where the car wanted to go,
which was his only hope of regaining control.
But the slide became a sickening spin, and the Honda rotated three
hundred and sixty degrees, as if it were a carousel without callio:
around .around.. . until the truck began to come into view again. For
an instant, as they glided downhill, still turning, Lindsey was certain
the car would slip safely past the other vehicle. She could see beyond
the big rig now, and the road below was free of traffic.
Then the front bumper on Hatch's side caught the back of the truck.
Tortured metal shrieked.
The Honda shuddered and seemed to explode away from the point of
collision, slamming backward into the guardrail. Lindsey's teeth
clacked together hard enough to ignite sparks of pain in her jaws, all
the way into her temples, and the hand braced against the dashboard bent
painfully at the wrist. Simultaneously, the strap of the shoulder
harness, which stretched diagonally across her chest from right shoulder
to left hip, abruptly cinched so tight that her breath burst from her.
The car rebounded from the guardrail, not with sufficient momentum to
reconnect with the truck but with so much torque that it pivoted three
hundred and sixty degrees again. As they spun-glided past the truck,
Hatch fought for control, but the steering wheel jerked erratically back
and forth, tearing through his hands so violently that he cried out as
his palms were abraded.
Suddenly the moderate gradient appeared precipitously steep, like the
water-greased spillway of an amusement-park flume ride. Lindsey would
have screamed if she could have drawn breath. But although the safety
strap had loosened, a diagonal line of pain still cut across her chest,
making it impossible to inhale. Then she was rattled by a vision of the
Honda skating in a long glissade to the next bend in the road, crashing
through the guardrail, tumbling out into the void-and the image was so
horrifying that it was like a blow, knocking breath back into her.
As the Honda came out of the second rotation, the entire driver's side
slammed into the guardrail, and they slid thirty or forty feet without
losing contact. To the accompaniment of a grinding-screeching-scraping
of metal against metal, showers of yellow sparks plumed up, mingling
with the falling snow, like swarms of summer fireflies that had flown
through a time warp into the wrong season.
The car shuddered to a halt, canted up slightly at the front left
corner, evidently hooked on a guard post. For an instant the resultant
silence was so deep that Lindsey was half stunned by it; she shattered
it with an explosive exhalation.
She had never before experienced such an overwhelming sense of relief.
Then the car moved again.
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