35 NOW THIS BRIEF INTERLUDE
Drive that old Chrysler to Mexico, boy.
— Z. Z. Top
At Libertyville High, Coach Puffer bad given way to Coach Jones, and
football had given way to basketball. But nothing really changed: the LHS
cagers didn't do much better than the LHS gridiron warriors—the only bright
spot was Lenny Barongg, a three-sport man whose major one was basketball.
Lenny stubbornly went about having the great year he needed to get the
athletic scholarship to Marquette that he lusted after.
Sandy Galton suddenly blew town. One day he was there, the next he was
gone. His mother, a forty-five-year old wino who didn't look a day over
sixty, did not seem terribly concerned. Neither did his younger brother, who
pushed more dope than any other kid in Gornick Junior High. A romantic
rumor that he had cut out for Mexico made the rounds at Libertyville High.
Another, less romantic, rumor also made the rounds: that Buddy Repperton
had been on Sandy about something and he felt it would be safer to make
himself scarce.
The Christmas break approached and the school's atmosphere grew restless
and rather thundery, as it always did before a long vacation. The student
body's overall grade average took its customary pre-Christmas dip. Book
reports were turned in late and often bore a suspicious resemblance to jacket
copy (after all, how many sophomore English students are apt to call
The
Catcher in the Rye
"this burning classic of postwar adolescence"?). Class
projects were left half done or undone, the percentage of detention periods
given for kissing and petting in the halls skyrocketed, and busts for marijuana
went way up as the Libertyville High School students indulged in a little pre-
Christmas cheer. So a good many of the students were up; teacher
absenteeism was up; in the hallways and homerooms, Christmas decorations
were up.
Leigh Cabot was not up. She flunked an exam for the first time in her high
school career and got a D on an executive typing drill. She could not seem to
study, she found her mind wandering back, again and again, to Christine—to
the green dashboard instruments that had become hateful, gloating cat's-eyes,
watching her choke to death.
But for most, the last week of school before the Christmas break was a
mellow period when offences which would have earned detention slips at
other times of the year were excused, when hard-hearted teachers would
sometimes actually throw a scale on an exam where everyone had done
badly, when girls who had been bitter enemies made it up, and when boys
who had scuffled repeatedly over real or imagined insults did the same.
Perhaps more indicative of the mellow season than anything else was the fact
that Miss Rat-Pack, the gorgon of Room 23 study hall, was seen to smile…
not just once, but several times.
In the hospital, Dennis Guilder was moderately up—he had swapped his
bedfast traction casts for walking casts. Physical therapy was no longer the
torture it had been. He swung through corridors that had been strung with
tinsel and decorated with first-, second-, and third-grade Christmas pictures,
his crutches thump-thumping along, sometimes in time to the carols spilling
merrily from the overhead speakers.
It was a
caesura,
a lull, an interlude, a period of quiet. During his seemingly
endless walks up and down the hospital corridors, Dennis reflected that
things could be worse—much, much worse.
Before too long, they were.
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