"Shit! Not that '57?"
"Well, actually it was a '58—"
Yeah, yeah, '57 or '58, red and white. That was the only goddam thing he
cared about, Treated it like it was a woman. It was over that car he quit the
Legion, did you know that?"
"No," I said. "What happened?"
"Ah, shit. Ancient history, kid. I'm bending your car as it is. But every time I
think of that sonofabitch LeBay, I see red. I've still got the scars on my hands.
Uncle Sam had three years or my life during World War II and I never got so
much as a Purple Heart out of it, although I was in combat almost all that
time. I fought my way across half the little shitpot islands in the South
Pacific. Me and about fifty other guys stood up to a banzai charge on
Guadalcanal two fucking million Japs coming at us hopped to the eyeballs
and waving those swords they made out of Maxwell House coffee cans—and
I never got a scar, I felt a couple of bullets go right by me, and just before we
broke that charge the guy next to me got his guts rearranged courtesy of the
Emperor of Japan, but the only times I saw the color of my own blood over
there in the Pacific was when I cut myself shaving. Then…"
McCandless laughed.
"Shit on toast, there I go again. My wife says I'll open my mouth too wide
someday and just fall right in. What'd you say your name was?"
"Dennis Guilder."
"Okay, Dennis, I bent your ear, now you bend mine. What did you want?"
"Well, my friend bought that car and fixed it up… for a sort of a street-rod, I
guess you'd say. A showpiece."
"Yeah, just like LeBay," McCandless said, and my mouth went dry. "He
loved that fucking car, I'll say that for him. He didn't give a shit for his wife
—you know what happened to her?"
"Yes," I said.
"He drove her to it," McCandless said grimly. "After their kid died, she
didn't get any comfort from him at all. None. I don't think he gave much of a
shit about the kid, either. Sorry, Dennis. I never could shut up. Talk all the
time. Always have. My mother used to say, "Dickie, your tongue's hung in the
middle and runs on both ends." What did you say you wanted?"
"My friend and I went to LeBay's funeral," I said, "and after it was over, I
introduced myself to his brother—"
"He seemed a right enough type," McCandless broke in. "Schoolteacher.
Ohio."
"That's right. I had a talk with him, and he
did
seem like a nice enough guy, I
told him I was going to do my senior English paper on Ezra Pound—"
"Ezra who?"
"Pound."
"Who the fuck's that? Was he at LeBay's funeral? "
"No, sir. Pound was a poet."
"A what?"
"Poet. He's dead too."
"Oh." McCandless sounded doubtful.
"Anyway, LeBay—this is George LeBay he said he'd send me a bunch of
magazines about Ezra Pound for my report, if I wanted them. Well, it turns out
that I could use them, but I forgot to get his address. I thought you might have
it."
"Sure, it'll be in the records; all that stuff is. I hate being fucking secretary,
but my year's up this July, and never again. Know what I mean? Never-
fucking-again."
"I hope I'm not being a real pain in the ass."
"No. Hell, no. I mean, that's what the American Legion's for, right? Gimme
your address, Dennis, and I'll send you a card with the info on it."
I gave him my name and address and apologized again for bothering him at
his job.
"Think nothing of it," he said. "I'm on my fucking coffee break, anyhow." I
had a moment to wonder just what it was he did at David Emerson's, which
really was where Libertyville's elite bought. Was he a salesman? I could see
him showing some smart young lady around, saying,
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