Richard Bachman - The Regulators
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Also by Richard Bachman and published by Hodder Stoughton ThinnerThe Bachman Books By Stephen King Carrie'Salem's LotThe ShiningNight ShiftThe StandChristinePet SemataryItMiseryThe TommyknockersThe Dark HalfThe Stand: the Complete and Uncut EditionFour Past MidnightNeedful ThingsGerald's GameDolores ClaiborneNightmares and DreamscapesInsomniaRose Madder
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
"Leaving on a Jet Plane," Words and Music by John Denver, Copyright
1967 (Renewed) 1995, Cherry Lane Music Publishing Company, Inc.
(ASCAP), International Copyright Secured. All rights Reserved. Reprinted
by Permission of Cherry Lane Music Company.
Copyright 1996 by Richard Bachman
First published in Great Britain in 1996
by Hodder and Stoughton
A division of Hodder Headline PLC
The right of Richard Bachman to be identified as the Author
of this Work has been asserted by him in accordance with the
Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
10 9 8 7654321
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be
reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted
in any form or by any means without the prior written
permission of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated
in any form of binding or cover other than that in which
it is published and without a similar condition being
imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
All characters in this publication are fictitious
and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead,
is purely coincidental.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
Bachman, Richard, 1947-1985 The regulators
1 .American fiction 20th century
I.Title813.5'4[F]
ISBN034067176 9
Typeset by Palimpsest Book Production Limited,
Polmont, Stirlingshire
Printed and bound in Great Britain by
Mackays of Chatham PLC, Chatham, Kent
Hodder and Stoughton
A division of Hodder Headline PLC
338 Euston Road
London NW1 3BH
Thinking of Jim Thompson and Sam Peckinpah:
Legendary shadows.
EDITOR'S NOTE
Before his death from cancer in late 1985, Richard Bachman published five novels. In 1994, while preparing to move to a new house, the author's widow found a cardboard carton filled with manuscripts in the cellar. These novels and stories were in varying degrees of completion. The least finished were longhand scribbles in the steno notebooks Bachman used for original composition. The most finished was a typescript of the novel which follows. It was in a manuscript box secured with rubber bands, as if Bachman had been on the verge of sending it to his publisher when his final remission ended.
The former Mrs Bachman brought it to me for evaluation, and Ifound it at least up to the standard of his earlier work. I have made afew small changes, mostly updating certain references (substitutingEthan Hawke for Rob Lowe in the first chapter, for instance), but have otherwise left it pretty much as I found it. This work is now offered (with the approval of the author's widow) as the capstoneto a peculiar but not uninteresting career.
My thanks to Claudia Eschelman (the former Claudia Bachman),Bachman scholar Douglas Winter, Elaine Koster at New AmericanLibrary, and to Carolyn Stromberg, who edited the earliest Bachmannovels and validated this one.
The former Mrs Bachman says that, to the best of her knowledge,Bachman never travelled to Ohio, 'although he might have flownover it once or twice'. She also has no idea when this novel was written, although she suspects it must have been late at night. Richard Bachman suffered from chronic insomnia.
Charles Verrill
New York City
'Mister, we deal in lead'Steve McQueen The Magnificant Seven
Postcard from William Garin to his sister, Audrey Wyler:
CHAPTER ONE
Poplar Street/3:45 p.m./July 15, 1996
Summer's here.
Not just summer, either, not this year, but the apotheosis of summer, the avatar of summer, high green perfect central Ohio summer dead-smash in the middle of July, white sun glaring out of that fabled faded Levi's sky, the sound of kids hollering back and forth through the Bear Street Woods at the top of the hill, the tink! of Little League bats from the ballfield on the other side of the woods, the sound of power mowers, the sound of muscle-cars out on Highway 19, the sound of rollerblades on the cement sidewalks and smooth macadam of Poplar Street, the sound of radios Cleveland Indians baseball (the rare day game) competing with Tina Turner belting out 'Nutbush City Limits', the one that goes Twenty-five is the speed limit, motorcycles not allowed in it' and surrounding everything like an auditory edging of lace, the soothing, silky hiss of lawn sprinklers.
Summer in Wentworth, Ohio, oh boy, can you dig it. Summer here on Poplar Street, which runs straight through the middle of that fabled faded American dream with the smell of hotdogs in the air and a few burst paper remains of Fourth of July firecrackers still lying here and there in the gutters. It's been a hot July, a perfect good old by God blue-ribbon jeezer of a July, no doubt about it, but if you want to know the truth, it's also been a dry July, with no water but the occasional flipped spray of a hose to stir those last shreds of Chinese paper from where they lie. That may change today; there's an occasional rumble of thunder from the west, and those watching The Weather Channel (there's plenty of cable TV on Poplar Street, you bet) know that thunderstorms are expected later on. Maybe even a tornado, although that's unlikely.
Meantime, though, it's all watermelon and Kool-Aid and foul tips off the end of the bat; it's all the summer you ever wanted and more here in the center of the United States of America, life as good as you ever dreamed it could be, with Chevrolets parked in driveways and steaks in refrigerator meat-drawers waiting to be slapped on the barbecue in the backyard come evening. (And will there be apple pie to follow? What do you think?) This is the land of green lawns and carefully tended flowerbeds; this is the Kingdom of Ohio where the kids wear their hats turned around backward and their strappy tank-tops hang down over their baggy shorts and their great big galooty sneakers all seem to bear the Nike swoosh.
On the block of Poplar which runs between Bear Street at the top of the hill and Hyacinth at the bottom, there are eleven houses and one store. The store, which stands on the corner of Poplar and Hyacinth, is the ever-popular, all-American convenience mart, where you can get your cigarettes, your Blatz or Rolling Rock, your penny candy (although these days most of it costs a dime), your BBQ supplies (paper plates plastic forks taco chips ice cream ketchup mustard relish), your Popsicles, and your wide variety of Snapple, made from the best stuff on earth. You can even get a copy of Penthouse at the E-Z Stop 24 if you want one, but you have to ask the clerk; in the Kingdom of Ohio, they mostly keep the skin magazines under the counter. And hey, that's perfectly all right. The important thing is that you should know where to get one if you need one.
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