34 LEIGH AND CHRISTINE
My baby drove up in a brand-new Cadillac,
She said, "Hey, come here, Daddy,
I ain't never comin back!"
Baby, baby, won't you hear my plea?
Come on, sugar, come on back to me!
She said, "Balls to you, big daddy,
I ain't never comin back!"
— The Clash
It was a gray day, threatening snow, but Arnie was right on both counts—they
had a good time and he wasn't weird. Mrs Cabot had been at home when
Arnie got there, and her initial reception was cool. But it was a long time—
perhaps twenty minutes—before Leigh came downstairs, wearing a caramel-
colored sweater that clung lovingly to her breasts and a new pair of
cranberry-colored slacks that clung lovingly to her hips. This inexplicable
lateness in a girl who was almost always perfectly on time might have been
on purpose. Arnie asked her later and Leigh denied it with an innocence that
was perhaps just a little too wide-eyed, but in any case it served its purpose.
Arnie could be charming when he had to be, and he went to work on Mrs
Cabot with a will. Before Leigh finally came bouncing downstairs, twisting
her hair into a ponytail, Mrs Cabot had thawed. She had gotten Arnie a
Pepsi-Cola and was listening raptly as he regaled her with tales of the chess
club.
"It's the only
civilized
extra-curricular activity I've ever heard of," she told
Leigh, and smiled approvingly at Arnie.
"
BORRRRR-ing
," Leigh trumpeted. She put an arm around Arnie's waist and
smacked him loudly on the cheek.
"Leigh
Cabot
!"
"Sorry, Mums, but he looks cute in lipstick, doesn't he? Wait a minute, Arnie,
I've got a Kleenex. Don't
claw
at it." She dug in her purse for a tissue. Arnie
looked at Mrs Cabot and rolled his eyes. Natalie Cabot put a hand to her
mouth and giggled. The
rapprochement
between her and Arnie was
complete.
Arnie and Leigh went to Baskin-Robbins, where an initial awkwardness, left
over from the phone conversation of the night before, finally melted away.
Arnie had had a vague fear that Christine would not run well, or that Leigh
would find something nasty to say about her; she had never liked riding in his
car. Both were needless worries. Christine ran like a fine Swiss watch, and
the only things Leigh had to say about her rang of pleasure and amazement.
"I never would have believed it," she said as they drove out of the ice-cream
parlor's small parking lot and joined the flow of traffic beaded toward the
Monroeville Mall. "You must have worked like a dog."
"It wasn't as bad as it probably looked to you," Arnie said. "Mind some
music?"
"No, of course not."
Arnie turned on the radio—The Silhouettes were kip-kipping and boom-
booming through "Get a Job." Leigh made a face. "DIL, yuck. Can I change
it?"
"Be my guest."
Leigh switched it to a Pittsburgh rock station and got Billy Joel. "You may be
right," Billy admitted cheerfully, "I may be crazy." This was followed by
Billy telling his girl Virginia that Catholic girls started much too late—it was
the Block Party Weekend.
Now
, Arnie thought.
Now she'll start to hitch…
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