-cuuuuuse…
ME!"
like Steve Martin, with this big shit-eating grin on his face. Darnell
would holler over for Arnie to pick up those attachments before one of them
went through a hole in the floor or something.
Soon Repperton was swerving out of his way to give Arnie a whistling clap
on the back, accompanied by a bellowed "How ya doin, Cuntface?"
Arnie bore these opening salvoes with the stoicism of a guy who has seen it
all before, been through it all before. He was probably hoping for one of two
things—either that the harassment would reach a constant level of annoyance
and stop there, or that Buddy Repperton would find some other victim and
move on. There was a third possibility as well, one almost too good to hope
for—it was always possible that Buddy would get righteously busted for
something and just disappear from the scene, like his old buddy Roger
Gilman.
It had come to blows on the Saturday afternoon just past Arnie was doing a
grease-job on his car, mostly because he hadn't yet accumulated sufficient
funds to do any of the hundred other things the car cried out for. Repperton
came by, whistling cheerfully, a Coke and a bag of peanuts in one hand, a
jackhandle in the other. And as he passed stall twenty, he whipped the
jackhandle out sidearm and broke one of Christine's headlights.
"Smashed it to shit," Arnie told me over our pizza.
"Oh, jeez, lookit what I did!" Buddy Repperton had said, an exaggerated
expression of tragedy on his face. "Well, ex-
cuuuuuu
—"
But that was all he got out. The attack on Christine managed what the attacks
on Arnie himself hadn't been able to do—it provoked him into retaliation. He
came around the side of the Plymouth, hands balled into fists, and struck out
blindly. In a book or a movie, he probably would have socked Repperton
right on the old knockout button and put him on the floor for a ten-count.
Things rarely work out that way in real life. Arnie didn't get anywhere near
Repperton's chin. Instead he hit Repperton's hand, knocked the bag of peanuts
on the floor, and spilled Coca-Cola all over Repperton's face and shirt.
"All right, you fucking little prick!" Repperton cried. He looked almost
comically stunned. "There goes your ass!" He came for Arnie with the
jackhandle.
Several of the other men ran over then, and one of them told Repperton to
drop the jackhandle and fight fair. Repperton threw it away and waded in.
"Darnell never tried to put a stop to it? I asked Arnie.
"He wasn't there, Dennis. He disappeared fifteen minutes or half an hour
before it started. It's like he
knew
it was going to happen."
Arnie said that Repperton had done most of the damage right away. The black
eye was first; the scrape on his face (made by the class ring Repperton had
purchased during one of his many sophomore years) came directly afterward.
"Plus assorted other bruises," he said.
"What other bruises?"
We were sitting in one of the back booths. Arnie glanced round to make sure
no one was looking at us and then raised his T-shirt. I hissed in breath at what
I saw. A terrific sunset of bruises—yellow, red, purple, brown—covered
Arnie's chest and stomach. They were just starting to fade. How he had been
able to come to work after getting mashed around like that I couldn't begin to
understand.
"Man, are you sure he didn't spring any of your ribs?" I asked. I was really
horrified. The shiner and the scrape looked tame next to this shit. I had seen
high school scuffles, of course, had even been in a few, but I was looking at
the results of a serious beating for the first time in my life.
"Pretty sure," he said levelly. "I was lucky."
"I guess you were."
Arnie didn't say a lot more, but a kid I knew named Randy Turner was there,
and he filled me in on what had happened in more detail after school had
started again. He said that Arnie might have gotten hurt a lot worse, but he
came back at Buddy a lot harder and a lot madder than Buddy had expected.
In fact, Randy said, Arnie went after Buddy Repperton as if the devil had
blown a charge of red pepper up his ass. His arms were windmilling, his
fists were everywhere; He was yelling, cursing, Spraying spittle. I tried to
imagine it and couldn't—the picture I kept coming up with instead was Arnie
slamming his fists down on my dashboard hard enough to make dents,
screaming that he would make them eat it.
He drove Repperton halfway across the garage, bloodied his nose (more by
good luck than good aim), and got one to Repperton's throat that made him
start to cough and gag and generally lose interest in busting Arnie
Cunningham's ass.
Buddy turned away, holding his throat and trying to puke " and Arnie drove
one of his steel-toed workboots into Repperton's jeans-clad butt, knocking
him flat on his belly and forearms. Repperton was still gagging and holding
his throat with one hand, his nose was bleeding like mad, and (again,
according to Randy Turner) Arnie was apparently gearing up to kick the son
of a bitch to death when Will Darnell magically reappeared, hollering in his
wheezy voice to cut the shit over there, cut the shit, cut the
shit.
"Arnie thought that fight was going to happen," I told Randy. "He thought it
was a put-up job."
Randy shrugged. "Maybe. Could be. It sure was funny, the way Darnell
showed up when Repperton really started to lose."
About seven guys grabbed Arnie and dragged him away. At first he fought
them like a wildman, screaming for them to let him go, screaming that if
Repperton didn't pay for the broken headlight he'd kill him. Then he
subsided, bewildered and hardly aware how it had happened that Repperton
was down and he was still on his feet.
Repperton finally got up, his white T-shirt smeared with dirt and grease, his
nose still bubbling blood. He made a lunge for Arnie. Randy said it looked
like a pretty halfhearted lunge, mostly for form's sake. Some of the other guys
got hold of him and led him away. Darnell came over to Arnie and told him
to hand in his toolbox key and get out.
"Jesus, Arnie! Why didn't you call me Saturday afternoon?"
He sighed. "I was too depressed."
We finished our pizza, and I bought Arnie a third Pepsi. That stuff's murder
on your complexion, but it's great for depression.
"I don't know whether he meant get out just for Saturday or from then on,"
Arnie said to me on our way home. "What do you think, Dennis? You think he
kicked me out for good?"
"He asked for your toolbox key, you said."
"Yeah. Yeah, he did. I never got kicked out of
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