Regina Cunningham answered the phone, her voice stiff and formal.
voice of the old Regina, the one who gave Arnie and me peanut butter
on stone-ground rye, of course). "How are you? We heard that they sprung
"I'm doing okay," I said. "How about you?"
There was a brief silence, and then she said, "Well, you know how things
"Problems," I said. "Yeah."
"All the problems we missed "in earlier years," Regina said. "I guess they
just piled up in a corner and waited for us."
I cleared my throat a little and said nothing.
"Did you want to talk to Arnie?"
"If he's there."
After another slight pause, Regina said, "I remember that in the old days you
and he used to swap back and forth on New Year's Eve, seeing the New Year
in. Was that what you were calling about, Dennis?" She sounded almost
timid, and that was not like the old full-steam-ahead Regina at all.
"Well, yeah," I said. "Kid stuff, I know, but—"
"No!" she said, sharply and quickly. "No, not at all! If Arnie ever needed
you, Dennis—needed some friend now is the time. He… he's upstairs now,
sleeping. He sleeps much too much. And he's… he's not… he hasn't…
"Hasn't what, Regina?"
"He hasn't made any of his college applications! she burst out, and then
immediately lowered her voice, as if Arnie might overhear. "Not a single
one! Mr Vickers, the guidance counsellor at school, called and told me! He
scored 700s on his college boards, he could get into almost any college in the
country—at least he could have before this… this trouble…" Her voice
wavered toward tears, and then she got hold of herself again. "Talk to him,
Dennis. If you could spend the evening with him tonight… drink a few beers
with him and just… just talk to him "
She stopped, but I could tell there was something more. Something she
needed to say and couldn't.
"Regina," I said. I hadn't liked the old Regina, the compulsive dominator who
seemed to run the lives of her husband and son to fit her own timetable, but I
liked this distracted, weepy woman even less. "Come on. Take it easy,
okay?"
I'm afraid to talk to him," she said finally. "And Michael's afraid to talk to
him. He… he seems to explode if you cross him on some subjects. At first it
was only his car; now it's college too. Talk to him, Dennis, please." There
was another short pause, and then, almost casually, she brought out the heart
of her dread: "I think we're losing him."
"No, Regina, hey—"
"I'll get him," she said abruptly, and the phone clunked down. The wait
seemed to stretch out. I crooked the phone between my jaw and my shoulder
and rapped my knuckles on the cast that still covered my upper left leg. I
wrestled with a craven urge just to hang the telephone up and push this entire
business away.
Then the phone was picked up again. "Hello?" a wary voice asked, and the
thought that burned across my mind with complete assurance was:
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