you
didn't want to see
me…
not at school, and nights you're
always down there at the garage. Working on your car."
"That's all done," he said. And then, with a monstrous effort: "It's the car I
want to—
oww, goddammit!
" He grabbed at his back, where there had been
another huge bolt of pain, and got only a handful of back brace.
"Arnie?" She was alarmed. "Are you all right?"
"Yeah. I had a twinge in my back."
"What were you going to say?"
"Tomorrow," he said. "We'll drive over to Baskin-Robbins and have an ice
cream and maybe do some Christmas shopping and have some supper and I'll
have you home by seven. And I won't be weird, I promise."
She laughed a little, and Arnie felt a great, sweeping relief. It was like balm.
"You dummy."
"Does that mean okay?"
"Yes, it means okay." Leigh paused and then said softly, "I said my parents
didn't want me to see so much of you. I didn't say I wanted that."
"Thanks," he said, struggling to keep his voice steady. "Thanks for that."
"What do you want to talk to me about?"
Christine. I want to talk to you about her-and about my dreams. And about
why I look like hell. And why I always want to listen to WDIL now, and
about what I did that night after everyone was gone… the night I hurt my
back. Oh Leigh I want-
Another slash of pain up his back like cat's claws.
"I think we just talked about it," he said.
"Oh." A slight, warm pause. "Good."
"Leigh?"
"Umm."
"There'll be more time now. I promise. All the time you want." And thought:
Because now, with Dennis in the hospital, you're all that's left, all that's
left between me… me and…
"That's good," Leigh said.
"I love you."
"Goodbye, Arnie."
Say it back!
he wanted to shout suddenly.
Say it back, I need you to say it
back!
But there was only the click of the phone in his ear.
He sat behind Will's desk for a long time, head lowered, getting hold of
himself. She didn't need to say it back every time he said it to her, did she?
He didn't need reassurance that badly, did he? Did he?
Arnie got up and went to the door. She was coming out with him tomorrow,
that was the important thing. They would do the Christmas shopping they had
been planning on the day those shitters trashed Christine; they would walk
and talk; they would have a good time. She would say she loved him.
"She'll say it," he whispered, standing in the doorway, but halfway down the
left-hand side of the garage Christine sat like a mute and stupid denial, her
grille poking forward as if hunting something.
And the voice whispered out of his lower consciousness, the dark
questioning voice:
How did you hurt your back? How did you hurt your
back? How did you hurt your back, Arnie?
It was a question he shrank from. He was afraid of the answer.
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