No! No! No!
Overriding everything, even the heavy thunder of the exhaust (something
underneath had been damaged for sure), was LeBay's rotting, triumphant
voice, coming from a decayed larynx, passing lips that were already
shrivelled away from the teeth and tattooed with a delicate spidering of dark
green mould, LeBay's triumphant, shrieking voice:
Here you go, you shitter! See how you like it!
There had been the heavy, mortal thud of Christine's bumper striking flesh,
the gleam of a pair of spectacles rising in the night air, turning over and over,
and then Arnie had awakened in his room, curled into a trembling ball and
clutching his pillow. It had been quarter of two in the morning, and his first
feeling had been a great and terrible relief, relief that he was still alive. He
was alive, LeBay was dead, and Christine was safe. The only three things in
the world that mattered.
Oh but Arnie, how did you hurt your back?
Some voice inside, sly and insinuating—asking a question he was afraid to
answer.
I hurt it at Philly Plains, he had told everyone. One of the junkers started
to slip back down the ramp of Will's flatbed and I pushed it back up-didn't
think about it; I just did it. Strained something really bad
. So he had said.
And one of the junkers
had
started to slip, and he
had
pushed it back up, but
that hadn't been how he hurt his back, had it? No.
That night after he and Leigh had found Christine smashed to hell in the
parking lot, sitting on four slashed tires that night at Darnell's, after everyone
was gone… he had tuned the radio in Will's office to the oldies on WDIL...
Will trusted him now, why not? He was running cigarettes across the state
line into New York, he was running fireworks all the way over to Burlington,
and twice he had run something wrapped in flat brown-paper packages into
Wheeling, where a young guy in an old Dodge Challenger traded him another,
slightly larger, brown-paper package, for it. Arnie thought maybe he was
trading cocaine for money, but he didn't want to know for sure.
He drove a boat on these trips, Will's private car, a 1966 Imperial as black
as midnight in Persia. It was whisper-quiet, and the boot had a false bottom.
If you kept to the speed limit, it was no problem. Why should it be? The
important thing was that he now had the keys to the garage. He could come in
after everyone else was gone. Like he had that night. And he had turned on
WDIL… and he had… he had…
Hurt his back somehow.
What had he been doing to hurt his back?
A strange phrase came to him in answer, floating up from his subconscious:
It's just a funny little glitch.
Did he really want to know? He didn't. In fact, there were times when he
didn't want the car at all. There were times when he felt he would be better
off just… well, junking it. Not that he ever would, or could. It was just that,
sometimes (in the sweaty, shaking aftermath of that dream last night, for
instance), he felt that if he got rid of it, he would be… happier.
The radio suddenly spat an almost feline burst of static.
"Don't worry," Arnie whispered. He ran his hand slowly over the,
dashboard, loving the feel of it. Yes, the car frightened him sometimes. And
he supposed his father was right; it had changed his life to some degree. But
he could no more junk it than he could commit suicide.
The static cleared. The Marvelettes were singing "Please Mr Postman".
And then a voice said in his car, "Arnold Cunningham?" He jumped and
snapped off the radio. He turned around. A small, dapper little man was
leaning in Christine's window. His eyes were a dark brown, and his color
was high—from the cold outside, Arnie guessed.
"Yes?"
"Rudolph Junkins. State Police, Detective Division." Junkins stuck his hand
in through the open window.
Arnie looked at it for a moment. So his father had been right.
He grinned his most charming grin, took the hand, shook it firmly, and said,
"Don't shoot, copper, I'll throw out my guns."
Junkins returned Arnie's grin, but Arnie noticed that the grin did no more than
touch his eyes, which were exploring the car in a quick, thorough fashion that
Arnie didn't like. Not at all.
"Whoo! I got the feeling from the local police that the guys who worked over
your rolling iron had really tattooed it. It sure doesn't look like it."
Arnie shrugged and got out of the car. Friday nights were slow at the garage;
Will himself rarely came in, and he wasn't in tonight. Across the way, in stall
ten, a fellow named Gabbs was putting a new silencer on his old Valiant, and
down at the far end of the garage there was the periodic burr on an air
wrench as some fellow put on his snow tires. Otherwise, he and Junkins had
the place to themselves.
"It wasn't anywhere near as bad as it looked," Arnie said. He thought that this
smiling, dapper little man might be extremely clever. As if it was a natural
outgrowth of the thought, he rested his hand easily on Christine's roof and
immediately felt better. He could cope with this man, clever or not. After all,
what was there to worry about? "There was no structural damage."
"Oh? I understood they punched holes in the body with some sharp
instrument," Junkins said, looking closely at Christine's flank. "I'll be damned
if I can see the fill. You must be a bodywork genius, Arnie. The way my wife
drives, maybe I ought to put you on retainer," He smiled disarmingly, but his
eyes went on running back and forth over the car. They would dart
momentarily to Arnie's face and then go back to the car again. Arnie liked it
less and less.
"I'm good but not God," Arnie said. "You can see the bodywork if you really
look for it." He pointed at a minute ripple in Christine's back deck. And
there. "He pointed at another. "I was lucky enough to find some original
Plymouth body parts up in Ruggles, I replaced the entire back door on this
side. You see the way the paint doesn't quite match?" He knocked his
knuckles on the door.
"Nope," Junkins said. "I might be able to tell with a microscope, Arnie, but it
looks like a perfect match to me."
He also knocked his knuckles on the door. Arnie frowned.
"Hell of a job " Junkins said. He walked slowly around to the front of the car.
"
Hell
of a job, Arnie. You're to be congratulated."
"Thanks." He watched as Junkins, in the guise of the sincere admirer, used
his sharp brown eyes to look for suspicious dents, flaked paint, maybe a spot
of blood or a snarl of matted hair. Looking for signs of Moochie Welch.
Arnie was suddenly sure that was just what the shitter was doing. "What
exactly can I do for you, Detective Junkins?"
Junkins laughed. "Man, that's formal! I can't take that! Make it Rudy, okay?"
"Sure," Arnie said, smiling. "What can I do for you, Rudy?"
"You know, it's funny," Junkins said, squatting to look at the driver's side
headlights. He tapped one of them reflectively with his knuckles and then,
with seeming absent-mindedness, he ran his forefinger along the headlight's
semicircular metal hood. His overcoat pooled on the oilstained cement floor
for a moment; then he stood up. "We get reports on anything of this nature—
the trashin of your car, I mean—"
"Oh, hey, they didn't really trash it," Arnie said. He was beginning to feel as
if he was on a tightrope, and he touched Christine again. Her solidity, her
reality, once more seemed to comfort him. "They tried, you know, but they
didn't do a very good job."
"Okay. I guess I'm not up on the current terminology." Junkins laughed.
"Anyway, when it came to my attention, what do you think I said? "Where's
the photographs?" That's what I said. I thought it was an oversight, you know.
So I called the Libertyville PD and they said there were no photographs."
"No," Arnie said. "A kid my age can't get anything but liability insurance, you
know that. Even the liability comes with a seven-hundred-dollar deductible.
If I had damage insurance, I would have taken plenty of pictures. But since I
didn't, why would I? I sure wouldn't want them for my scrapbook."
"No, I guess not," Junkins said, and walked idly around to the rear of the car,
eyes searching for broken glass, for scrapes, for guilt. "But you know what
else I thought was funny? You didn't even report the crime!" He raised his
dark questioning eyes to Arnie's, looked at him closely and then smiled a
phony, bewildered little smile. "Didn't even report it!" Huh," I said.
"Sonofabitch! Who reported it?" Guy's father, they tell me." Junkins shook his
head. "I don't get that, Arnie, I don't mind telling you. A guy works his ass off
restoring an old car until it's worth two, maybe five thousand dollars, then
some guys come along and beat the hell out of it—"
"I told you—"
Rudy Junkins raised his hand and smiled disarmingly. For one weird second
Arnie thought he was going to say "Peace", as Dennis sometimes did when
things got heavy.
"Damaged it. Sorry."
"Sure," Arnie said.
"Anyhow, according to what your girlfriend said, one of the perpetrators…
well, defecated on the dashboard. I would have thought you would have been
mad as hell. I would have thought you would have reported it."
Now the smile faded altogether and Junkins looked at Arnie soberly, even
sternly.
Arnie's cool gray eyes met Junkins's brown ones.
"Shit wipes off," he said finally. "You want to know something, Mr—Rudy?
You want me to tell you something?"
"Sure, son."
"When I was one and a half, I got hold of a fork and marked up an antique
bureau that my mother had saved up for over a period of maybe five years.
Saved up her pin money, that's what she said. I guess I racked the hell out of
it in a very short time. Of course I don't remember it, but she says she just sat
right down and bawled." Arnie smiled a little, "Up until this year, I couldn't
feature my mother doing that. Now I think I can. Maybe I'm growing up a
little, what do you think?"
Junkins lit a cigarette. "Am I missing the point, Arnie? Because I don't see it
yet."
"She said that she would rather have had me in diapers until I was three than
have had me do that. Because, she said, shit wipes off." Arnie smiled. "You
flush it away and it's gone."
"The way Moochie Welch is gone?" Junkins asked.
"I know nothing about that."
"No?"
"No."
"Scout's honor?" Junkins asked. The question was humorous but the eyes
were not; they probed at Arnie, looking for the smallest break, a crucial
flicker.
Down the aisle, the fellow who had been putting on his winter snows
dropped a tool on the concrete. It clanged musically and the fellow chanted,
almost chorally, "Oh shit on you, you whore."
Junkins and Arnie both glanced that way briefly, and the moment was broken.
"Sure, Scout's honor," Arnie said. "Look, I suppose you have to do this, it's
your job—"
"Sure its my job," Junkins agreed softly. "The boy was run over three times
each way. He was meat. They scraped him up with a shovel."
"Come on," Arnie said sickly. His stomach did a lazy barrel roll.
"Why? Isn't that what you're supposed to do with shit? Scrape it up with a
shovel?"
"
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