They know,
Arnie thought, resigned. At least this had nothing to do with
Junkins's obsession with Buddy Repperton and Moochie Welch and the
others (at least not directly, he amended cautiously); this smelled like a well-
planned and well-coordinated operation against Will's smuggling operations
from Libertyville into New York and New England.
"Kid," one of the cops said, "would you like to answer some questions or
make a statement? If you think you would, I'll read you the Miranda right
now."
"No," Arnie said calmly. "I don't have anything to say."
"Things could go a lot easier with you."
"That's coercion," Arnie said, smiling a little. "Watch out or you'll put a big
fat hole in your own case."
The cop flushed. "If you want to be an asshole, that's your lookout."
The Chrysler boot was open. They bad pulled out the spare tire, the jack, and
several boxes of small parts springs, nuts, bolts, and the like. One of the cops
was almost entirely in the boot; only his blue-grey-clad legs stuck out. For a
moment Arnie hoped vaguely that they wouldn't find the under-compartment;
then he dismissed the thought—it was just the childish part of him, the part he
now wished burned away, because all that part of him did lately was hurt.
They would find it. The quicker they found it, the quicker this nasty roadside
scene would end.
As if some god had heard his wish and decided to grant it posthaste, the cop
in the boot called triumphantly, "Cigarettes!"
"All right," the cop who had read the warrant said. "Close it up." He turned
to Arnie and read him the Miranda warning. "Do you understand your rights
as I have read them to you?"
"Yes," Arnie said.
"Do you want to make a statement?"
"No."
"Get in the car, son. You're under arrest."
I'm under arrest,
Arnie thought, and almost brayed laughter, the thought was
so foolish. This was all a dream and he would wake up soon.
Under arrest.
Being hustled to a State Police cruiser. People looking at him—
Desperate, childish tears, hot salt, welled up in his throat and closed it.
His chest hitched—once, twice.
The cop who had read him his rights touched his shoulder and Arnie
shrugged it off with a kind of desperation. He felt that if he could get deep
down inside himself quickly enough, he would be okay—but sympathy might
drive him mad,
"Don't touch me!"
"You do it the way you want to do it, son," the cop said, removing his hand.
He opened the cruiser's rear door for Arnie and handed him in.
Do you cry in dreams?
Of course you could—hadn't he read about people
waking up from sad dreams with tears on their cheeks? But, dream or no
dream, he wasn't going to cry.
Instead he would think of Christine. Not of his mother or father, not of Leigh
or Will Darnell, not of Slawson—all the miserable shitters who had betrayed
him.
He would think of Christine.
Arnie closed his eyes and leaned his pale, gaunt face, forward into his hands
and did just that. And as always, thinking about Christine made things better.
After a while he was able to straighten up and look out at the passing scenery
and think about his position.
Michael Cunningham put the telephone back into its cradle slowly—with
infinite care—as if to do less might cause it to explode and spray his upstairs
study with jagged black hooks of shrapnel.
He sat back in the swivel chair behind his desk, on which there sat his IBM
Correcting Selectric II typewriter, an ashtray with the blue-and-gold legend
HORLICKS UNIVERSITY barely legible across the dirty bottom, and the
manuscript of his third book, a study of the ironclads
Monitor and
Merrimac.
He had been halfway through a page when the telephone rang.
Now he flipped the paper release on the right side of the typewriter and
pulled the page bonelessly out from under the roller, observing its slight
curve clinically. He put it down on top of the manuscript, which was now
little more than a jungle of pencilled-in corrections.
Outside, a cold wind whined around the house. The morning's cloudy warmth
had given way to a frigid, clear December evening. The earlier melt had
frozen tight, and his son was being held in Albany on charges of what
amounted to smuggling:
no Mr Cunningham it is not marijuana it is
cigarettes, two hundred cartons of Winston cigarettes with no tax stamps.
From downstairs he could hear the whir of Regina's sewing machine. He
would have to get up now, go to the door and open it, go down the hall to the
stairs, walk down the stairs, walk into the dining room, then into the plant-
lined little room that had once been a laundry but which was now a sewing
room, and stand there while Regina looked up at him (she would be wearing
her half-glasses for the close work), and say "Regina, Arnie has been
arrested by the New York State Police."
Michael attempted to begin this process by getting up from his desk chair, but
the chair seemed to sense he was temporarily off-guard. It swivelled and
rolled backward on its casters at the same moment, and Michael had to clutch
the edge of his desk to keep from failing. He slipped heavily back into the
chair, heart thudding with painful rapidity in his chest.
He was struck suddenly by such a complex wave of despair and sorrow that
he groaned aloud and grabbed his forehead, squeezing his temples. The old
thoughts swarmed back in, as predictable as summer mosquitoes and just as
maddening. Six months ago, things had been okay. Now his son was sitting in
a jail cell somewhere. What were the watershed moments? How could he,
Michael, have changed things? What was the history of it, exactly? Where
had the sickness started to creep in?
"Jesus—"
He squeezed harder, listening to the winter-whine outside the windows. He
and Arnie had put the storms on just last month. That had been a good day,
hadn't it? First Arnie holding the ladder and looking up, then him down and
Arnie up there, him shouting for Arnie to be careful, the wind in his hair and
dead brown leaves blowing over his shoes, their colors gone. Sure, it had
been a good day. Even after that beastly car had come, seeming to
overshadow everything in their son's life like a fatal disease, there had been
some good days. Hadn't there?
"Jesus," he said again in a weak, teary voice that he despised.
Unbidden images rose behind his eyes. Colleagues looking at him sideways,
maybe whispering in the faculty club. Discussions at cocktail parties in
which his name bobbed uneasily up and down like a waterlogged body.
Arnie wouldn't be eighteen for almost two months and he supposed that
meant his name couldn't be printed in the paper, but everyone would still
know. Word got around.
Suddenly, crazily, be saw Arnie at four, astride a red trike he and Regina had
gotten at a rummage sale (Arnie at four had called them "Momma's rubbage
sales"). The trike's red paint was flaked with scales of rust, the tires were
bald, but Arnie had loved it; he would have taken that trike to bed with him,
if he could. Michael closed his eyes and saw Arnie riding up and down the
sidewalk, wearing his blue corduroy jumper, his hair flopping in his eyes,
and then his mind's eye blinked or wavered or did something and the rusty
rubbage-sale trike was Christine, her red paint scummed with rust, her
windows milky-white with age.
He gritted his teeth together. Someone looking in might have thought he was
smiling crazily. He waited until he had some kind of control, and then got up
and went downstairs to tell Regina what had happened. He would tell her
and she would think of what they were going to do, just as she always had;
she would steal the forward motion from him, taking whatever sorry balm
that actually
doing
things had to give, and leave him with only sick sorrow
and the knowledge that now his son was someone else.
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