Boy, that's some pretty car, isn't it? He fixed it up like magic.
Will didn't believe in Santa Claus or the tooth fairy, but he was perfectly
willing to acknowledge that there were strange things in the world. A
practical man recognized that and put it to use if he could. A friend of Will's
who lived in Los Angeles claimed he had seen the ghost of his wife before
the big quake of '67, and Will had no particular reason to doubt the claim
(although he would have doubted it completely if the friend had had anything
to gain). Quent Youngerman, another friend, had claimed to have seen his
father, long dead, standing at the foot of his hospital bed after Quent, a steel-
worker, had taken a terrible fall from the fourth floor of a building under
construction down on Wood Street.
Will had heard such stories off and on all his life, as most people
undoubtedly did. And as most thinking people probably did, he put them in a
kind of open file, neither believing nor disbelieving, unless the teller was an
obvious crank. He put them in that open file because no one knew where
people came from when they were born and no one knew where people went
when they died, and not all the Unitarian ministers and born-again Jesus-
shouters and Popes and Scientologists in the world could convince Will
otherwise. Just because some people went crazy on the subject didn't mean
they knew anything. He put stuff like that in that open file because nothing
really inexplicable had ever happened to him.
Except maybe something like that was happening now.
November:
Repperton and his good buddies beat the living shit out of
Cunningham's car at the airport. When it comes in on the tow-truck, it looks
like the Green Giant shat all over it. Darnell looks at it and thinks,
It's never
gonna run again. That's all; it's never gonna run another foot.
At the end of the month the Welch kid gets killed on JFK Drive.
December:
A State Police detective comes sucking around. Junkins. He
comes sucking around one day and talks to Cunningham; then he comes
sucking around on a day when Cunningham isn't here and wants to know how
come the kid is lying about how much damage Repperton and his dog-turd
friends (of whom the late and unlamented Peter "Moochie" Welch was one)
did to Cunningham's Plymouth.
Why you talking to me?
Darnell asks him,
wheezing and coughing through a cloud of cigar smoke,
Talk to him, it's his
fucking Plymouth, not mine. I just run this place so working joes can keep
their cars running and keep putting food on the tables for their families.
Junkins listens patiently to this rap. He knows Will Darnell is doing a hell of
a lot more than just running a do-it-yourself garage and a junkyard, but
Darnell
knows
he knows, so that's okay.
Junkins lights a cigarette and says,
I'm talking to you because I already
talked to the kid and he won't tell me. For a little while there I thought he
wanted to tell me; I got the feeling he's scared green about something.
Then he tightened up and wouldn't tell me squat.
Darnell says,
If you think Arnie ran down that Welch kid, say so.
Junkins says,
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