



One of those giant water bottles they have in office buildings, transformed by the summer sun into a hot, blazing sapphire. An overturned Studebaker automobile with its chrome bullet nose glittering in the sun like some Buck Rogers missile. A little girl’s dolly looking amazedly between her thighs as she gave birth to stuffing.

A brass bedstead leaning drunkenly in the sun. Then your eye would stop, or be stopped, by something that seemed as out of place as those limp clockfaces or the living room in the desert. There was so much stuff that my eyes hurt just looking at it-or maybe it was your brain that actually hurt, because it could never quite decide what your eye should stop on. It was maybe eighty feet deep and filled with all the American things that get empty, wear out, or just don’t work anymore. The pump (Teddy and Vern were currently standing there and squabbling about who was going to prime it) was at the back of this great pit. If you came from the front, a wide dirt road came in through the gate, broadened out into a semicircular area that had been bulldozed as flat as a dirt landing-strip, and then ended abruptly at the edge of the dumping-pit. To my child’s eye, nothing in the Castle Rock Dump looked as if it really belonged there. It always reminds me of the surrealist painters when I think of it-those fellows who were always painting pictures of clockfaces lying limply in the crotches of trees or Victorian living rooms standing in the middle of the Sahara or steam engines coming out of fireplaces. The dump is one of my strongest memories of Castle Rock. It had once been green, but almost all of the paint had been rubbed off by the thousands of hands that had worked that handle since 1940. The iron handle stuck off at an angle, looking a one-winged bird that was trying to fly. There was a Crisco can filled with water next to the pump handle, and the great sin was to forget to leave it filled for the next guy to come along. Teddy and Vern led the way toward the well, which you tapped with an old-fashioned pump-the kind from which you had to call the water with elbow-grease. We climbed to the top of the fence, swung over, and jumped down. Every twenty feet weather-faded signs were posted. There was a six-foot security fence surrounding it. Beyond this small boggy area was the sandy, trash-littered verge of the dump. We got to the dump around one-thirty, and Vern led the way down the embankment with a Paratroops over the side! We went to the bottom in big jumps and leaped over the brackish trickle of water oozing listlessly out of the culvert which poked out of the cinders.
