whssht, whssht
of the broom's bristles on the
oil-stained concrete, the place was silent. And empty.
"Place is really jumpin tonight, Jimmy, huh?" Will wheezed.
Jimmy looked around. "No, sir, Mr Darnell, nobody been in since Mr Hatch
came and got his Fairlane, and that was half an hour ago."
"Just joking," Will said, wishing again that Cunningham were here. You
couldn't talk to Jimmy except on a perfectly literal Dick-and-Jane level. Still,
maybe he would invite him in for a cup of coffee with a slug of Courvoisier
tipped in for good measure. Make it a threesome. Him, Jimmy, and the
emphysema. Or maybe, since the emphysema had brought its brother tonight,
you'd have to call it a foursome. "What do you say about—"
He broke off suddenly, noticing that stall twenty was empty. Christine was
gone.
"Arnie come in?" he said.
"Arnie?" Jimmy repeated, blinkin stupidly.
"Arnie, Arnie Cunningham," Will said impatiently. "How many Arnies do
you know? His car's gone."
Jimmy looked around at stall twenty and frowned. "Oh. Yeah."
Will smiled. "Hotshot got knocked out of his hotshot chess tournament, huh?"
"Oh, did he?" Jimmy asked. "Jeez, that's too bad, huh?"
Will restrained an urge to grab Jimmy and give him a shake and a wallop. He
would not get angry; that only made it harder to breathe, and he would end up
having to shoot his lungs full of the horrible-tasting stuff from his aspirator.
"Well, what did he say, Jimmy? What did he say when you saw him?" But
Will knew suddenly and surely that Jimmy hadn't seen Arnie.
Jimmy finally understood what Will was driving at. "Oh, I didn't
see
him.
Just saw Christine go out the door, you know. Boy, that's some pretty car, ain't
it? He fixed it up like magic."
"Yes," Will said. "Like magic." It was a word that had occurred to him in
connection with Christine before. He suddenly changed his mind about
inviting Jimmy in for coffee and brandy. Still looking at stall twenty, he said,
"You can go home now, Jimmy."
"Aw, jeez, Mr Darnell, you said I could have six hours tonight. That ain't
over until ten."
"I'll punch you out at ten.
Jimmy's muddy eyes brightened at this unexpected, almost unheard-of
largesse. "Really?"
"Yeah, really, really. Make like a tree and leave, Jimmy, okay?"
"Sure," Jimmy said, thinking that for the first time in the five or six years he
had worked for Will (he had trouble remembering which it was, although his
mother kept track of it, the same as she kept track of all his tax papers), the
old grouch had gotten the Christmas spirit. Just like in that movie about the
three ghosts. Summoning up his own Christmas spirit, Jimmy cried: "That's a
big ten-four, good buddy!"
Will winced and lumbered into his office. He turned on the Mr Coffee and sat
down behind his desk, watching as Jimmy put away his broom, turned out
most of the overhead fluorescents, and got his heavy coat.
Will leaned back and thought.
It was, after all, his brains that had kept him alive all these years, alive and
one step ahead; he had never been handsome, he had been fat all of his adult
life, and his health had always been terrible. A childhood bout of scarlet
fever one spring had been followed by a mild case of polio; he had been left
with a right arm that operated at only about seventy per cent capacity. As a
young man he had endured a plague of boils. When Will was forty-three his
doctor had discovered a large, spongy growth under one arm. It had turned
out to be non-malignant, but the removal surgery had kept him on his back
most of one summer, and as a result he had developed bedsores. A year later
he had almost died of double pneumonia. Now it was incipient diabetes and
emphysema. But his brains had always been fine and dandy, and his brains
had kept him one step ahead.
So he leaned back and thought about Arnie. He supposed one of the things
that had favorably impressed him about Cunningham after he had stood up to
Repperton that day was a certain similarity to the long-ago teenaged Will
Darnell. Of course, Cunningham wasn't sickly, but he had been pimply,
disliked, a loner. Those things had all been true of the young Will Darnell.
Cunningham had brains, too.
Brains and that car. That strange car.
"Good night, Mr Darnell," Jimmy called. He stood by the door for a moment,
and then added uncertainly, "Merry Christmas."
Will raised his hand in a wave. Jimmy left. Will heaved his bulk out of his
chair, got the bottle of Courvoisier out of the filing cabinet, and set it down
next to the Mr Coffee. Then he sat down again. A rough chronology was
ticking through his mind.
August:
Cunningham brings in an old wreck of a '58 Plymouth and parks it in
stall twenty. It looks familiar, and it should. It's Rollie LeBay's Plymouth.
And Arnie doesn't know it—he has no need to know—but once upon a time
Rollie LeBay also made an occasional run to Albany or Burlington or
Portsmouth for Will Darnell… only in those dim dead days, Will had a '54
Cadillac. Different transport cars, same false-bottom boot with the hidden
compartment for fireworks, cigarettes, booze, and pot. In those days Will had
never heard of cocaine. He supposed no one but jazz musicians in New York
had.
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