Ave Maria
. Then I went down to my folks' bedroom, where the
upstairs phone is, and sat down in Mom's rocking chair with a sigh.
I picked up the phone and made the first of my calls.
"Dennis Guilder, scourge of the turnpike extension project!" Brad Jeffries
said heartily. "Good to hear from you, kiddo. When you gonna come over and
watch the Penguins with me again?"
"I dunno," I said. "I get tired of watching handicapped people play hockey
after a while. Now if you got interested in a
good
team, like the Flyers—"
"Christ, have I got to listen to this from a kid that isn't even mine?" Brad
asked. "The world really is going to hell, I guess."
We chatted for a while longer, just kicking things back and forth, and then I
told him why I had called.
He laughed. "What the
fuck
, Denny? You goin into business for yourself?"
"You might say so." I thought of Christine. "For a limited time only."
"Don't want to talk about it?"
"Well, not just yet. Do you know someone who might have an item like that
for rent?"
"I'll tell you, Dennis. There's only one guy I know who might do business
with you on anything like that. Johnny Pomberton. Lives out on the Ridge
Road. He's got more rolling stock than Carter's got liver pills."
"Okay," I said. "Thanks, Brad,"
"How's Arnie?"
"All right, I guess. I don't see as much of him as I used to."
"Funny guy, Dennis. I never in my wildest dreams thought he'd last out the
summer the first time I set eyes on him. But he had one hell of a lot of
determination."
"Yeah," I said. "All of that and then some."
"Say hi to him when you see him."
"I'll do it, Brad. Stay loose."
"Can't live if you do anything else, Denny. Come an over some night and peel
a few cans with me."
"I will. Good night."
" 'Night."
I hung up and then hesitated over the phone for a minute or two, not really
wanting to make this next call. But it had to be done; it was central to the
whole sorry, stupid business. I picked the telephone up and dialled the
Cunninghams' number from memory. If Arnie answered, I would simply hang
up without speaking. But my luck was in; it was Michael who answered.
"Hello?" His voice sounded tired and a bit slurred.
"Michael, this is Dennis."
"Hey, hi!" He sounded genuinely pleased.
"Is Arnie there?"
"Upstairs. He came home from somewhere and went right to his room. He
looked pretty thundery, but that's far from unusual these days. Want me to call
him?"
"No," I said. "That's okay. It was really you I wanted to talk to, anyhow. I
need a favor."
"Well, sure. Name it." I realized what that slur in his voice was—Michael
Cunningham was at least halfway snookered. "You did
us
a helluva favor,
talking some sense to him about college."
"Michael, I don't think he listened to a thing I said."
"Well,
something
sure happened. He's applied to three schools just this
month. Regina thinks you walk on water, Dennis. And just between me and
thee, she's pretty ashamed of the way she treated you when Arnie first told us
about his car. But you know Regina. She's never been able to say 'I'm sorry'."
I knew that, all right. And what Regina would think, I wondered, if she knew
that Arnie—or whatever controlled Arnie—didn't have any more interest in
college than a hog has in mutual funds? That he was simply following Leigh's
tracks, hounding her, fixated on her? It was perversion on perversion—
LeBay, Leigh, and Christine in some hideous
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