"Listen, Michael," I said. "I'd like you to call me if Arnie decides to go out of
weekend. Day or night. I have to know if Arnie's going to leave Libertyville.
And I have to know before he leaves. It's very important."
was a near-whisper. "It's that goddam car of his, isn't it?"
How much did he suspect? How much did he know? If he was like most
people I knew, he probably suspected a little more drunk than sober. How
much? Even now I don't know for sure. But what I believe is that he
suspected
more than anyone—except maybe Will Darnell.
"Yeah," I said. "It's the car."
"I knew it," he said dully. "I knew. What's happening, Dennis? How is he
"Yes," he said. "Yes, all right."
"Dennis," he said. "Do you think I'll ever have my son back?"
He deserved the truth. That poor, devilled man deserved the truth. "I don't
know," I said, and bit at my lower lip until it hurt. "I think… that it may have
gone too far for that."
"Dennis," he almost wailed, "what is it? Drugs? Some kind of drugs?"
"I'll tell you when I can," I said. "That's all I can promise you. I'm sorry. I'll
tell you when I can."
Johnny Pomberton was easier to talk to.
He was a lively, garrulous man, and any fears I'd had that he wouldn't do
business with a kid soon went by the board. I got the feeling that Johnny
Pomberton would have done business with Satan freshly risen from hell with
the smell of brimstone still on him, if he had good old legal tender.
"Sure," he kept saying. "Sure, sure." You'd no more than started some
proposition before Johnny Pomberton was agreeing with you. It was a little
unnerving. I had a cover story, but I don't think he even listened to it. He
simply quoted me a price—a very reasonable one, as it turned out.
"That sounds fine," I said.
"Sure," he agreed. "What time, you coming by?"
"Well, how would nine-thirty tomorrow m—"
"Sure," he said. "See you then."
"One other question, Mr Pomberton.,
"Sure. And make it Johnny."
"Okay, Johnny, then. What about automatic transmission?"
Johnny Pemberton laughed heartily—so heartily that I held the phone away
from my ear a bit, feeling glum. That laugh was answer enough.
"On one of these babies? You got to be kidding. Why? Can't you run a manual
shift?"
"Yes, that's what I learned on," I said.
"Sure! So you got no problems, right?"
"I guess not," I said, thinking of my left leg, which would be running the
clutch—or trying to. Simply shifting it around a little tonight had made it ache
like hell, I hoped that Arnie would wait a few days before taking his trip out
of town, but somehow I didn't think that was on the cards. It would be
tomorrow, over the weekend at the latest, and my left leg would simply have
to bear up as best it could. "Well, good night, Mr Pomberton. I'll see you
tomorrow."
"Sure. Thanks for calling, kid. I got one all picked out in my mind for you.
You'll like her, see if you don't. And if you don't start calling me Johnny, I'm
gonna double the price."
"Sure," I said, and hung up on his laughter.
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