I felt a crazy laugh coming up my throat and dumped beer on it.
"No problem," Arnie said. "I could walk two miles of straight line, don't
would come in from their party and delay things a while longer—maybe
considered telling him that if he got picked up DWI while he was on bail,
keep my mouth shut. We went out.
The first early morning of 1979 was deeply, clearly cold, the kind of cold
that makes the moisture in your nose freeze in seconds. The snowbanks
ringing the driveway glittered with billions of diamond crystals. And there
sat Christine, her black windows cauled with frost. I stared at her.
The Mob
,
Arnie had said.
The Southern Mob or the Colombians
. It sounded
melodramatic but possible—no, more; it sounded plausible. But the Mob
shot people, pushed them out of windows, strangled them. According to
legend, Al Capone had disposed of one poor sucker with a lead-cored
baseball bat. But to drive a car over some guy's snow covered lawn and slam
it through the side of his house and into his living room?
The Colombians, maybe. Arnie said the Colombians are crazy
. But
that
crazy? I didn't think so.
She glittered in the light from the house and the stars, and what if it was her?
And what if she found out that Leigh and I had our suspicions? Worse yet,
what if she found out that we had been fooling around?
"You need help on the steps, Dennis?" Arnie asked, startling me.
"No, I can handle the steps," I said. "You might have to give me a hand on the
path."
"No problem, man."
I got down the kitchen steps sidesaddle, clutching the railing in one hand and
my crutches in the other. On the path, I set them under me, got out a couple of
steps, and then slipped. A dull thud of pain rumbled up my left leg, the one
that still wasn't worth doodly-squat. Arnie grabbed me.
"Thanks," I said, glad of a chance to sound shaky.
"No sweat."
We got over to the car, and Arnie asked if I could get in by myself. He left me
and crossed around the front of Christine's hood. I got hold of the doorhandle
with one gloved hand, and a hopeless feeling of dread and revulsion swept
over me. It wasn't until then that I really began to believe it, deep inside,
where a person lives. Because that doorhandle felt alive under my hand. It
felt like some living beast that was asleep. The doorhandle didn't feel like
chromed steel; dear Christ, it felt like skin. It seemed as if I could squeeze it
and wake the beast up, roaring.
Beast?