22 SANDY
First I
walked
past the Stop and Shop
Then I
drove
past the Stop and Shop.
I liked that much better when I drove
past the Stop and Shop,
'Cause I had the radio on.
— Jonathan Richman and the Modern Lovers
The parking-lot-attendant that night—every night from six until ten, as a
matter of fact—was a young man named Sandy Galton, the only one of Buddy
Repperton's close circle of hoodlum friends who had not been in the smoking
area on the day Repperton had been expelled from school. Arnie didn't
recognize him, but Galton recognized Arnie.
Buddy Repperton, out of school and with no interest in initiating the
procedures that might have gotten him readmitted at the beginning of the
spring semester in January, had gone to work at the gas station run by Don
Vandenberg's father. In the few weeks he had been there, he had already
begun a number of fairly typical scams—shortchanging gas customers who
looked as if they might be in too big a hurry to count the bills he gave back to
them, running the remold game (which consists of charging the customer for a
new tire and then actually putting on a remould and pocketing the fifteen- to
sixty-dollar difference), running the similar used-parts game, plus selling
inspection stickers to kids from the high school and nearby Horlicks—kids
desperate to keep their death-traps on the road.
The station was open twenty-four hours a day, and Buddy worked the late
shift, from 9 p.m. to 5 a.m. Around eleven o'clock, Moochie Welch and
Sandy Galton were apt to drop by in Sandy's old dented Mustang; Richie
Trelawney might come by in his Firebird; and Don, of course, was in and out
almost all the time—when he wasn't goofing off at school. By midnight on
any given weekend there might be six or eight guys sitting around in the
office, drinking beer out of dirty teacups, passing around a bottle of Buddy's
Texas Driver, doing a joint or maybe a little hash, farting, telling dirty jokes,
swapping lies about how much pussy they were getting, and maybe helping
Buddy fiddle around with whatever was up on the lift.
During one of these late-night gatherings in early November, Sandy happened
to mention that Arnie Cunningham was parking his machine in the long-term
lot out at the airport. He had, in fact, bought a thirty-day ticket.
Buddy, whose usual demeanor during these late-night bull-sessions was one
of sullen withdrawal, tipped his cheap contour-plastic chair abruptly back
down on all four legs and put his bottle of Driver down on the windscreen-
wiper cabinet with a bang.
"What did you say?" he asked. "Cunningham? Ole Cuntface?"
"Yeah," Sandy said, surprised and a little uneasy. "That's him."
"You sure? The guy who got me kicked out of school?" Sandy looked at him
with mounting alarm. "Yeah. Why?"
"And he's got a thirty-day ticket, which means he's parked in the long-term
lot?"
"Yeah. Maybe his folks didn't want him to have it at…"
Sandy trailed off. Buddy Repperton had begun to smile. It was not a pleasant
sight, that smile, and not only because the teeth it revealed were already
going rotten. It was as if, somewhere, some terrible machinery had just
whined into life and was beginning to cycle up and up to full running speed.
Buddy looked around from Sandy to Don to Moochie Welch to Richie
Trelawney. They looked back at him, interested and a little scared.
"Cuntface," he said in a soft, marveling voice. "Ole Cuntface got his machine
street-legal and his funky folks have got him parking it out at the airport."
He laughed.
Moochie and Don exchanged a glance that was somehow both uneasy and
eager.
Buddy leaned toward them, elbows on the knees of his jeans.
"Listen," he said.
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