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still etched in my memory … every turn; every bump; every dip; the scary times (two of them) when trucks passed us going the other way … I don't think I could e even close to describing how I felt; sitting back there with John Coffey; both of us bundled up like Indians in the old blankets Harry had been thoughtful enough to bring along。
It was; most of all; a sense of lostness … the deep and terrible ache a child feels when he realizes he has gone wrong somewhere; all the landmarks are strange; and he no longer knows how to find his way home。 I was out in the night with a prisoner … not just any prisoner; but one who had been tried and convicted for the murder of two little girls; and sentenced to die for the crime。 My belief that he was innocent wouldn't matter if we were caught; we would go to jail ourselves; and probably Dean Stanton would; too。 I had thrown over a life of work and belief because of one bad execution and because I believed the overgrown lummox sitting beside me might be able to cure a woman's inoperable brain tumor。 Yet watching john watch the stars; I realized with dismay that I no longer did believe that; if I ever really had; my urinary infection seemed faraway and unimportant now; as such harsh and painful things always do once they are past (if a woman could really remember how bad it hurt to have her first baby; my mother once said; she'd never have a second)。 As for Mr。 Jingles; wasn't it possible; even likely; that we had been wrong about h
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