37 DARNELL COGITATES
Baby, lemme ride in your automobile,
Hey, babe, lemme ride in your automobile!
Tell me, sweet baby,
Tell me: Just how do you feel?
— Chester Burnett
Will Darnell was at the garage until after midnight on the night Buddy
Repperton and his friends met Christine in Squantic Hills. His emphysema
had been particularly bad that day. When it got bad, he was afraid to lie
down, although he was ordinarily a perfect bear for sleep.
The doctor told him it was not at all likely he would choke to death in his
sleep, but as he got older and the emphysema slowly tightened its grip on his
lungs, he feared it more and more. The fact that his fear was irrational didn't
change it in the least. Although he hadn't been inside a church of any faith
since he had been twelve years old—forty-nine years ago now!—he had
been morbidly interested in the circumstances surrounding the death of Pope
John Paul I ten weeks before. John Paul had died in bed and had been found
there in the morning. Already stiffening probably. That was the part that
haunted Will:
Already stiffening, probably.
He pulled into the garage at half-past nine, driving his 1966 Chrysler
Imperial—the last car he intended ever to own. At about the same time
Buddy Repperton was noticing the twin sparks of distant headlights in his
rearview mirror.
Will was worth better than two million dollars, but money didn't give him
much pleasure anymore, if indeed it ever had. The money didn't even seem
completely real anymore. Nothing did, except the emphysema. That was
hideously real, and Will welcomed anything that took his mind off it.
The problem of Arnie Cunningham, now—
that
had taken his mind off his
emphysema. He supposed that was why he had let Cunningham hang around
the place when all of his strongest- instincts told him to get the kid out of the
garage, he was in some way dangerous. Something was going on with
Cunningham and his rebuilt '58. Something very peculiar.
The kid wasn't in tonight; he and the entire LHS chess club were in
Philadelphia for three days at the Northern States Fall Tourney. Cunningham
had laughed about that; he was much changed from the pimply, big-eyed kid
that Buddy Repperton had jumped on, the kid Will had immediately (and
erroneously) dismissed as a crybaby jellyfish and maybe a goddam queer in
the bargain.
For one thing, he had grown cynical.
He had told Will in the office yesterday afternoon over cigars (the boy had
developed a taste for those as well; Will doubted if his parents knew) that he
had missed so many chess club meetings that according to the by-laws, he
was no longer a member. Slawson, the faculty advisor, knew it but was
conveniently overlooking it until after the Northern States Tourney.
"I've missed more meetings than anyone, but I also happen to play better than
anyone else, and the shitter knows—" Arnie winced and shoved both hands
into the small of his back for a moment.
"You ought to get a doctor to look at that," Will remarked.
Arnie winked, suddenly looking much older than nearly eighteen. "I don't
need anything but a good Christian fuck to stretch the vertebrae."
"So you're going to Philly?" Will had been disappointed, even though
Cunningham had the off-time coming; it meant he would have to put Jimmy
Sykes in charge for the next couple of nights, and Jimmy didn't know his ass
from ice cream.
"Sure. I'm not about to turn down three days of bright lights," Arnie said. He
saw Will's sour face and had grinned. "Don't worry, man. This close to
Christmas, all your regulars are buying toys for the kiddies instead of spark
plugs and carburetor kits. This place will be dead until next year, and you
know it."
That was certainly true enough, but he hadn't needed a snotnose kid to point it
out for him.
"You want to go to Albany for me after you get back?" Will had asked.
Arnie looked at him carefully. "When?"
"This weekend."
"Saturday?"
"Yes."
"What's the deal?"
"You take my Chrysler to Albany that's the fucking deal. Henry Buck was
fourteen clean used cars he wants to get rid of. He
says
they're clean. You go
look at them. I'll give you a blank check. If they look good, you make the
deal. If they look hot, tell him to take a flying fuck at a rolling doughnut."
"And what do I fake with me?"
Will had looked at him for a long time. "Getting scared, Cunningham?"
"No." Arnie crushed his cigar out half-smoked. He looked at Will
defensively. "Maybe I just feel the odds getting a little longer each time I do
it. Is it coke?"
"I'll get Jimmy to do it," Will said brusquely.
"Just tell me what it is."
"Two hundred cartons of Winstons."
"All right."
"You sure? Just like that?"
Arnie had laughed. "It'll be a break from chess."
Will parked the Chrysler in the stall closest to his office, the one with MR
DARNELL DO NOT BLOCK! painted inside the lines. He got out and
slammed the door, puffing, laboring for breath. The emphysema was sitting
on his chest, and tonight it seemed to have brought its brother. No, he just
wasn't going to lie down; no matter what that asshole doctor said.
Jimmy Sykes was apathetically wielding the big push broom. Jimmy was tall
and gangling, twenty-five years old. His light mental retardation made him
look perhaps eight years younger. He had started combing his hair back in a
fifties-style ducktail, in imitation of Cunningham, whom Jimmy almost
worshipped. Except for the low
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