Arnie's shoulder. Arnie shook it off and went on digging for his car-keys.
"Arnie. Please."
Arnie turned around fast. For a moment he seemed on the verge of making
that evening's blackness total by striking his father. Then some of the
"All right," he said. "What do you want?"
expression of helplessness—it would have been funny if it hadn't been so
gray and haggard around the edges.
pleasant smell of well-cared-for car drifted out. "I could see that from the
"Please," he said. "This is hard for me. Harder than you know."
desperate and unhappy.
Arnie uttered a harsh laugh. "Just like her, in other words."
"Your- mother is going through the change of life," Michael said quietly. "It's
been extremely difficult for her."
Arnie blinked at him, at first not even sure what he had heard. It was as if his
father had suddenly said something to him in igpay atinlay; it seemed to have
no more relevance to what they were talking about than baseball scores.
"W-What?"
"The change. She's frightened, and she's drinking too much, and sometimes
she's in physical pain. Not often," he said, seeing the alarmed look on Arnie's
face, "and she's been to the doctor, and the change is all it is. But she's in an
emotional uproar. You're her only child, and the way she is now, all she can
see is that she wants things to be right for you, no matter what the cost."
"She wants things her way. And that isn't anything new. She's
always
wanted
things her way."
"That she thinks the right thing for you is whatever she thinks the right thing is
goes without saying," Michael said. "But what makes you think you are so
different? Or better? You were after her ass in there, and she knew it. So did
I."
"She started it—"
"No, you started it when you brought the car home. You knew how she felt.
And she's right about another thing. You've changed. From the first day you
came home with Dennis and said you'd bought a car; that's when it started.
Do you think that hasn't upset her? Or me? To have your kid start exhibiting
personality traits you didn't even know existed?"
"Hey, Dad, come on! That's a little—"
"We never see you, you're always working on your car or out with Leigh."
"You're starting to sound just like her."
Michael suddenly grinned—but it was a sad grin "You're wrong about that.
Just as wrong as you can be.
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