You are invited to preview Stephen King’s latest
triumph
NEEDFUL THINGS
A new spectacle of terror from the undisputed
master of the macabre
CHAPTER ONE
1
In a small town, the opening of a new
store is big news.
It wasn’t as big a deal to Brian Rusk as it was
to some; his mother, for instance. He had heard her discussing it
(he wasn’t supposed to call it gossiping, she had told him, because
gossiping was a dirty habit and she didn’t do it) at some length on
the telephone with her best friend, Myra Evans, over the last month
or so. The first workmen had arrived at the old building which had
last housed Western Maine Realty and Insurance right around the
time school let in again, and they had been busily at work ever
since. Not that anyone had much idea what they were up to in there;
their first act had been to put in a large display window, and
their second had been to soap it opaque.
Two weeks ago a sign had appeared in the doorway,
hung on a string over a plastic see-through suction-cup.
OPENING SOON!
The sign read.
NEEDFUL THINGS A NEW KIND OF STORE
“You won’t believe your eyes!”
“It’ll be just another antique shop,” Brian’s
mother said to Myra. Cora Rusk had been reclining on the sofa at
the time, holding the telephone with one hand and eating
chocolate-covered cherries with the other while she watched
Santa Barbara on the TV. “Just another antique shop with a
lot of phony early American furniture and moldy old crank
telephones. You wait and see.”
That had been shortly after the new display
window had been first installed and then soaped over, and his
mother spoke with such assurance that Brian should have felt sure
the subject was closed. Only with his mother, no subject ever
seemed to be completely closed. Her speculations and suppositions
seemed as endless as the problems of the characters on Santa
Barbara and General Hospital.
Last week the first line of the sign hanging in
the door was changed to read:
GRAND OPENING OCTOBER 9TH—BRING YOUR
FRIENDS!
Brian was not as interested in the new store as
his mother (and some of the teachers; he had heard them talking
about it in the teachers’ room at Castle Rock Middle School when it
was his turn to be Office Mailman), but he was eleven, and a
healthy eleven-year-old boy is interested in anything new. Besides,
the name of the place fascinated him. Needful Things: what,
exactly, did that mean?
He had read the changed first line last Tuesday,
on his way home from school. Tuesday afternoons were his late days.
Brian had been born with a harelip, and although it had been
surgically corrected when he was seven, he still had to go to
speech therapy. He maintained stoutly to everyone who asked that he
hated this, but he did not. He was deeply and hopelessly in love
with Miss Ratcliffe, and he waited all week for his special ed
class to come around. The Tuesday schoolday seemed to last a
thousand years, and he always spent the last two hours of it with
pleasant butterflies in his stomach.
There were only four other kids in the class, and
none of them came from Brian’s end of town. He was glad. After an
hour in the same room with Miss Ratcliffe; he felt too exalted for
company. He liked to make his way home slowly in the late
afternoon, usually pushing his bike instead of riding it, dreaming
of her as yellow and gold leaves fell around him in the slanting
bars of October sunlight.
His way took him along the two-block section of
Main Street across from the Town Common, and on the day he saw the
sign announcing the grand opening, he had pushed his nose up to the
glass of the door, hoping to see what had replaced the stodgy desks
and industrial yellow walls of the departed Western Maine Realtors
and Insurance Agents. His curiosity was defeated. A shade had been
installed and was pulled all the way down. Brian saw nothing but
his own reflected face and cupped hands.
On Friday the 4th, there had been an ad for the
new store in Castle Rock’s weekly newspaper, the Call. The ad was
surrounded by a ruffled border, and below the printed matter was a
drawing of angels standing back to back and blowing long trumpets.
Aside from the opening time, 10:00 a.m., the ad said nothing that
could not be read on the sign dangling from the suction cup: the
name of the store was Needful Things, it would open for business at
ten o’clock in the morning on October 9th, and, of course, “You
won’t believe your eyes.” There was not the slightest hint of what
goods the proprietor or proprietors of Needful Things intended to
dispense.
This seemed to irritate Cora Rusk a great
deal—enough, anyway, for her to put in a rare Saturday-morning call
to Myra.
“I’ll believe my eyes, all right,” she
said. “When I see those spool beds that are supposed to be
two hundred years old but have Rochester, New York,
stamped on the frames for anybody who cares to bend down
their heads and look under the bedspread flounces to
see, I’ll believe my eyes just fine. ”
Myra said something. Cora listened, fishing
Planter’s Peanuts out of the can by ones and twos and munching them
rapidly. Brian and his little brother, Sean, sat on the living-room
floor watching cartoons on TV. Sean was completely immersed in the
world of the Smurfs, and Brian was not totally uninvolved with that
community of small blue people, but he kept one ear cocked toward
the conversation.
“Ri-iiight!” Cora Rusk had exclaimed with
even more assurance and emphasis than usual as Myra made some
particularly trenchant point. “High prices and moldy antique
telephones!”
Yesterday, Monday, Brian had ridden through
downtown right after school with two or three friends. They were
across the street from the new shop, and he saw that during the day
someone had put up a dark-green awning. Written across the front in
white letters were the words NEEDFUL THINGS. Polly Chalmers, the
lady who ran the sewing shop, was standing out on the sidewalk,
hands on her admirably slim hips, looking at the awning with an
expression that seemed to be equally puzzled and admiring.
Brian, who knew a bit about awnings, admired it
himself. It was the only real awning on Main Street, and it gave
the new store its own special look. The word “sophisticated” was
not a part of his working vocabulary, but he knew at once there was
no other shop in Castle Rock which looked like this. The awning
made it look like a store you might see in a television show. The
Western Auto across the street looked dowdy and countrified by
comparison.
When he got home, his mother was on the sofa,
watching Santa Barbara, eating a Little Debbie Creme Pie,
and drinking Diet Coke. His mother always drank diet soda while she
watched the afternoon shows. Brian was not sure why, considering
what she was using it to wash down, but thought it would probably
be dangerous to ask. It might even get her shouting at him, and
when his mother started shouting, it was wise to seek
shelter.
“Hey, Ma!” he said, throwing his books on the
counter and getting the milk out of the refrigerator. “Guess what?
There’s an awnin on the new store.”
“Who’s yawning?” Her voice drifted out of the
living room.
He poured his milk and came into the doorway.
“Awning,” he said. “On the new store downstreet.
She sat up, found the remote control, and pushed
the mute button. On the screen, Al and Corinne went on talking over
their Santa Barbara problems in their favorite Santa Barbara
restaurant, but now only a lip-reader could have told exactly what
those problems were. “What?” she said. “That Needful Things
place?”
“Uh-huh,” he said, and drank some milk.
“Don’t slurp,” she said, tucking the rest
of her snack into her mouth. “It sounds gruesome. How many
times have I told you that?”
About as many times as you’ve told me not to talk
with my mouth full, Brian thought, but said nothing. He had learned
verbal restraint at an early age.
“Sorry, Mom.”
“What kind of awning?”
“Green one.”
“Pressed or aluminum?”
Brian, whose father was a siding salesman for the
Dick Perry Siding and Door Company in South Paris, knew exactly
what she was talking about, but if it had been that kind of
awning, he hardly would have noticed it. Aluminum and pressed-metal
awnings were a dime a dozen. Half the homes in The Rock had them
sticking out over their windows.
“Neither one,” he said. “It’s cloth. Canvas, I
think. It sticks out, so there’s shade right underneath. And it’s
round, like this.” He curved his hands (carefully, so as not to
spill his milk) in a semi-circle. “The name is printed on the end.
It’s most sincerely awesome.”
“Well, I’ll be butched!”
This was the phrase with which Cora most commonly
expressed excitement or exasperation. Brian took a cautious step
backward, in case it should be the latter.
“What do you think it is, Ma? A restaurant,
maybe?”
“I don’t know,” she said, and reached for the
Princess phone on the endtable. She had to move Squeebles the cat,
the TV Guide, and a quart of Diet Coke to get it. “But it
sounds sneaky.”
“Mom, what does Needful Things mean? Is it
like—”
“Don’t bother me now, Brian, Mummy’s busy. There
are Devil Dogs in the breadbox if you want one. Just one, though,
or you’ll spoil your supper.” She was already dialling Myra, and
they were soon discussing the green awning with great
enthusiasm.
Brian, who didn’t want a Devil Dog (he loved his
Ma a great deal, but sometimes watching her eat took away his
appetite), sat down at the kitchen table, opened his math book, and
started to do the assigned problems—he was a bright, conscientious
boy, and his math was the only home-work he hadn’t finished at
school. As he methodically moved decimal points and then divided,
he listened to his mother’s end of the conversation. She was again
telling Myra that soon they would have another store selling
stinky old perfume bottles and pictures of someone’s dead
relatives, and it was really a shame the way these things
came and went. There were just too many people out there, Cora
said, whose motto in life was take the money and run. When she
spoke of the awning, she sounded as if someone had deliberately set
out to offend her, and had succeeded splendidly at the task.
I think she thinks someone was supposed to tell
her, Brian had though as his pencil moved sturdily along, carrying
down and rounding off. Yeah, that was it. She was curious, that was
number one. And she was pissed off, that was number two. The
combination was just about killing her. Well, she would find out
soon enough. When she did, maybe she would let him in on the big
secret. And if she was too busy, he could get it just by listening
in on one of her afternoon conversations with Myra.
But as it turned out, Brian found out quite a lot
about Needful Things before his mother or Myra or anyone else in
Castle Rock.
2
He hardly rode his bike at all on his way home
from school on the afternoon before Needful Things was scheduled to
open; he was lost in a warm daydream (which would not have passed
his lips had he been coaxed with hot coals or bristly tarantula
spiders) where he asked Miss Ratcliffe to go with him to the Castle
County Fair and she agreed.
“Thank you, Brian,” Miss Ratcliffe says, and
Brian sees little tears of gratitude in the corners of her blue
eyes—eyes so dark in color that they look almost stormy.
“I’ve been ... well, very sad lately. You see, I’ve lost my
love.”
“I’ll help you forget him,” Brian says, his
voice tough and tender at the same time, “if you’ll call me ...
Bri.”
“Thank you, ” she whispers, and then, leaning
close enough so he can smell her perfume—a dreamy scent of
wildflowers-she says, “Thank you ... Bri. And since, for tonight at
least, we will be girl and boy instead of teacher and student, you
may call me ... Sally.”
He takes her hands. Looks into her eyes. “I’m
not just a kid,” he says. “I can help you forget him ...
Sally.”
She seems almost hypnotized by this unexpected
understanding, this unexpected manliness; he may only be eleven,
she thinks, but he is more of a man than Lester ever was! Her hands
tighten on his. Their faces draw closer ... closer ...
“No, she murmurs, and now her eyes are so wide
and so close that he seems almost to drown in them, ”you mustn’t,
Bri ... it’s wrong ... ”
“It’s right, baby,” he says, and presses his
lips to hers.
She draws away after a few moments and
whispers tenderly
“Hey, kid, watch out where the fuck you’re
going!”
Jerked out of his daydream, Brian saw that he had
just walked in front of Hugh Priest’s pick-up truck.
“Sorry, Mr. Priest,” he said, blushing madly.
Hugh Priest was nobody to get mad at you. He worked for the Public
Works Department and was reputed to have the worst temper in Castle
Rock. Brian watched him narrowly. If he started to get out of his
truck, Brian planned to jump on his bike and be gone down Main
Street at roughly. the speed of light. He had no interest in
spending the next month or so in the hospital just because he’d
been daydreaming about going to the County Fair with Miss
Ratcliffe.
But Hugh Priest had a bottle of beer in the fork
of his legs, Hank Williams, Jr., was on the radio singing “High and
Pressurized,” and it was all just a little too comfy for anything
so radical as beating the shit out of a little kid on Tuesday
afternoon.
“You want to keep your eyes open,” he said,
taking a pull from the neck of his bottle and looking at Brian
balefully, “because next time I won’t bother to stop. I’ll just run
you down in the road. Make you squeak, little buddy.”
He put the truck in gear and drove off. Brian
felt an insane (and mercifully brief) urge to scream Well I’ll
be butched! after him. He waited until the orange road-crew
truck had turned off into Linden Street and then went on his way.
The Daydream about Miss Ratcliffe, alas, was spoiled for the day.
Hugh Priest had let in reality again. Miss Ratcliffe hadn’t had a
fight with her fiancé, Lester Pratt; she was still wearing her
small diamond engagement ring and was still driving his blue
Mustang while she waited for her own car to come back from the
shop.
Brian had seen Miss Ratcliffe and Mr. Pratt only
last evening, stapling those DICE AND THE DEVIL posters to the
telephone poles on Lower Main Street along with a bunch of other
people. They had been singing hymns. The only thing was, the
Catholics went around as soon as they were done and took them down
again. It was pretty funny in a way ... but if he had been bigger,
Brian would have tried his best to protect any posters Miss
Ratcliff put up with her hallowed hands.
Brian thought of her dark blue eyes, her long
dancer’s legs, and felt the same glum amazement he always felt when
he realized that, come January, she intended to change Sally
Ratcliffe, which was lovely, to Sally Pratt, which sounded to Brian
like a fat lady falling down a short hard flight of stairs.
Well, he thought, fetching the other curb and
starting slowly down Main Street, maybe she’ll change her mind.
It’s not impossible. Or maybe Lester Pratt will get in a car
accident or come down with a brain tumor or something like that. It
might even turn out that he’s a dope addict. Miss Ratcliffe would
never marry a dope addict.
Such thoughts offered Brian a bizarre sort of
comfort, but they did not change the fact that Hugh Priest had
aborted the daydream just short of its apogee (kissing Miss
Ratcliffe and actually touching her right breast while they
were in the Tunnel of Love at the fair). It was a pretty wild idea
anyway, an eleven-year-old kid taking a teacher to the County Fair.
Miss Ratcliffe was pretty, but she was also old. She had told the
speech kids once that she would be twenty-four in November.
So Brian carefully re-folded his daydream along
its creases, as a man will carefully fold a well-read and
much-valued document, and tucked it on the shelf at the back of his
mind where it belonged. He prepared to mount his bike and pedal the
rest of the way home.
But he was passing the new shop at just that
moment, and the sign in the doorway caught his eye. Something about
it had changed. He stopped his bike and looked at it.
at the top was gone. It had been replaced by a small square sign,
red letters on a white background.
it said, and
was all it said. Brian stood with his bike between his legs,
looking at this, and his heart began to beat a little faster.
GRAND OPENING OCTOBER 9TH—BRING YOUR
FRIENDS!
OPEN
OPEN
You’re not going in there, are you? he asked
himself. I mean, even if it really is opening a day early, you’re
not going in there, right?
Why not? he answered himself.
Well ... because the window’s still soaped over.
The shade on the door’s still drawn. You go in there, anything
could happen to you. Anything.
Sure. Like the guy who runs it is Norman Bates or
something, he dresses up in his mother’s clothes and stabs his
customers. Ri-iight.
Well, forget it, the timid part of his mind said,
although that part sounded as if it already knew it had lost.
There’s something funny about it.
But then Brian thought of telling his mother.
Just saying nonchalantly, “By the way, Ma, you know that new store,
Needful Things? Well, it opened a day early. I went in and took a
look around.”
She’d push the mute button on the remote control
in a hurry then, you better believe it! She’d want to hear all
about it!
This thought was too much for Brian. He put down
his bike’s kickstand and passed slowly into the shade of the
awning—it felt at least ten degrees cooler beneath its canopy—and
approached the door of Needful Things.
As he put his hand on the big old-fashioned brass
doorknob, it occurred to him that the sign must be a mistake. It
had probably been sitting there, just inside the door, for
tomorrow, and someone had put it up by accident. He couldn’t hear a
single sound from behind the drawn shade; the place had a deserted
feel.
But since he had come this far, he tried the knob
... and it turned easily under his hand. The latch clicked back and
the door of Needful Things swung open.
3
It was dim inside, but not dark. Brian could see
that track lighting (a specialty of the Dick Perry Siding and Door
Company) had been installed, and a few of the spots mounted on the
tracks were lit. They were trained on a number of glass display
cases which were arranged around the large room. The cases were,
for the most part, empty. The spots highlighted the few objects
which were in the cases.
The floor, which had been bare wood when this was
Western Maine Realty and Insurance, had been covered in a rich
wall-to-wall carpet the color of burgundy wine. The walls had been
painted eggshell white. A thin light, as white as the walls,
filtered in through the soaped display window.
Well, it’s a mistake, just the same, Brian
thought. He hasn’t even got his stock in yet. Whoever put the OPEN
sign in the door by mistake left the door unlocked by mistake, too.
The polite thing to do in these circumstances would be to close the
door again, get on his bike, and ride away.
Yet he was loath to leave. He was, after all,
actually seeing the inside of the new store. His mother would talk
to him the rest of the afternoon when she heard that. The maddening
part was this: he wasn’t sure exactly what he was seeing. There
were half a dozen (exhibits)
items in the display cases, and the spotlights
were trained on them—a kind of trial run, probably—but he couldn’t
tell what they were. He could, however, tell what they
weren’t: spool beds and moldy crank telephones.
“Hello?” he asked uncertainly, still standing in
the doorway. “Is anybody here?”
He was about to grasp the doorknob and pull the
door shut again when a voice replied, “I’m here.”
A tall figure—what at first seemed to be an
impossibly tall figure—came through a doorway behind one of
the display cases. The doorway was masked with a dark velvet
curtain. Brian felt a momentary and quite monstrous cramp of fear.
Then the glow thrown by one of the spots slanted across the man’s
face, and Brian’s fear was allayed. The guy was quite old, and his
face was very kind. He looked at Brian with interest and
pleasure.
“Your door was unlocked,” Brian began, “so I
thought—”
“Of course it’s unlocked,” the tall man
said. “I decided to open for a little while this afternoon as a
kind of ... of preview. And you are my very first customer. Come
in, my friend. Enter freely, and leave some of the happiness you
bring!”