26 CHRISTINE LAID LOW
Transfusion, transfusion,
Oh I'm never-never-never gonna speed again,
Pass the blood to me, Bud.
— "Nervous" Norvus
The next day Arnie and Leigh rode out to the airport together after school to
pick up Christine. They were planning on a trip to Pittsburgh to do some
early Christmas shopping, and they were looking forward to doing it together
—it seemed somehow terribly adult.
Arnie was in a fine mood on the bus, making up fanciful little vignettes about
their fellow passengers and making her laugh in spite of her period, which
was usually depressing and almost always painful. The fat lady in the man's
workshoes was a lapsed nun, he said. The kid in the cowboy hat was a
hustler. And on and on. She got into the spirit of the thing but was not as good
at it as he. It was amazing, the way he had come out of his shell… the way he
had
bloomed
. That was really the only word for it. She felt the smug, pleased
satisfaction of a prospector who has suspected the presence of gold by
certain signs and has been proved correct. She loved him, and she had been
right to love him.
They got off the bus at the terminal stop together and walked across the
access road to the parking lot hand in hand.
"This isn't bad," Leigh said. It was the first time she had come out with him to
pick up Christine. "Twenty-five minutes from school."
"Yeah, it's okay," Arnie said. "It keeps peace in the family, that's the
important thing. I'm telling you, when my mom got home that night and saw
Christine in the driveway, she went totally bullshit."
Leigh laughed, and the wind flipped her hair out behind her. The temperature
had moderated from last night's bitter mid-teens, but it was still chilly. She
was glad. Without a certain chill in the air, it didn't feel like Christmas
shopping. Bad enough the decorations in Pittsburgh wouldn't be up yet. But it
wasn't bad; it was good. And suddenly she was glad about everything, most
of all glad to be alive. And in love.
She had thought about it, the way she loved him. She had had crushes before,
and once, in Massachusetts, she had thought she
might
be in love, but about
this boy there was simply no question. He troubled her sometimes—his
interest in the car seemed almost obsessive—but even her occasional unease
played a part in her feelings, which were richer than anything she had ever
known. And part of it, she admitted to herself, was of course selfish—she
had, in weeks only, begun to make him over to…
complete
him.
They cut between the cars, headed for the thirty-day section of the parking
lot. Overhead, a USAir jet was coming in on its final approach, the thunder
of its engines rolling away in great flat waves of sound. Arnie was saying
something, but the plane obliterated his voice altogether after the first few
words—something about Thanksgiving dinner—and she turned to look at his
face, secretly amused by his silently moving mouth,
Then, quite suddenly, his mouth stopped moving. He stopped walking, His
eyes opened wider and then seemed to bulge. His mouth began to
twist
, and
the hand holding Leigh's suddenly clamped down ruthlessly, grinding her
fingerbones painfully together.
"Arnie—"
The jet-roar was fading, but he seemed not to have heard. His hand clamped
tighter. His mouth had slammed shut now, and it was knotted into an awful
grimace of surprise and terror. She thought,
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