"What are you laughing at, you punks? Huh?"
"You, you nerd!
" Arnie shouted triumphantly, and pulled out with a rattling
fusillade of backfires. I tromped the gas pedal of my own car and had to
swerve sharply to avoid Ralph, who was now apparently intent on murder. I
was still laughing, but it wasn't good laughter anymore, if it ever had been—
it was a shrill, breathless sound, almost like screaming.
"I'll kill you, punk!"
Ralph roared.
I goosed the accelerator again, and this time I almost tailgated Arnie.
I flipped Ralph the old El Birdo.
"Jam it!"
I yelled.
Then he was behind us. He tried to catch up; for a few seconds he came
pounding along the sidewalk, and then he stopped, breathing hard and
snarling.
"What a crazy day," I said aloud, a little frightened by the shaky, teary quality
of my own voice. That sour taste was back in my mouth. "What a crazy
fucking day."
Darnell's Garage on Hampton Street was a long building with rusty
corrugated-tin sides and a rusty corrugated-tin roof. Out front was a grease-
caked sign which read: SAVE MONEY! YOUR KNOW-HOW, OUR
TOOLS! Below that was another sign in smaller type, reading
Garage Space
Rented by the Week, Month, or Year.
The automobile junkyard was behind Darnell's. It was a block-long space
enclosed in five-foot-high strips of the same corrugated tin, Will Darnell's
apathetic nod toward the Town Zoning Board. Not that there was any way the
Board was going to bring Wilt Darnell to heel, and not just because two of
the three Zoning Board members were his friends. In Libertyville, Will
Darnell knew just about everyone who counted. He was one of those fellows
you find in almost any large town or small city, moving quietly behind any
number of scenes.
I had heard that he was mixed up in the lively drug traffic at Libertyville
High and Darby Junior High, and I had also heard that he was on a nodding
acquaintance with the big-time crooks in Pittsburgh and Philly. I didn't
believe that stuff—at least, I didn't
think
I did—but I knew that if you wanted
firecrackers or cherry-bombs or bottle-rockets for the Fourth of July, Will
Darnell would sell them to you. I had also heard, from my father, that Will
had been indicted twelve years before, when I was but a lad of five, as one
of the kingpins in a stolen-car ring that stretched from our part of the world
east to New York City and all the way up to Bangor, Maine. Eventually the
charges were dropped. But my dad also said he was pretty sure that Will
Darnell might be up to his ears in other shenanigans; anything from truck
hijackings to fake antiques.
A good place to stay away from, Dennis,
my father had said. This had been a
year ago, not long after I got my first clunker and had invested twenty dollars
in renting one of Darnell's Do-It-Yourself Garage bays to try and replace the
carburetor, an experiment that had ended in dismal failure.
A good place to stay away from—and here I was, pulling in through the main
gates behind my friend Arnie after dark, nothing left of the day but a tinge of
furnace red on the horizon. My headlights picked out enough discarded auto-
parts, wreckage, and general all-around dreck to make me feel more
depressed and tired than ever. I realized I hadn't called home, and that my
mother and father would probably be wondering just where the hell I was.
Arnie drove up to a big garage door with a sign beside it reading HONK
FOR ENTRY. There was a feeble light spilling out through a grime-coated
window beside the door somebody was at home—and I barely restrained an
impulse to lean out of my window and tell Arnie to drive his car over to my
house for the night. I had a vision of us stumbling onto Will Darnell and his
cronies inventorying hijacked color TVs or repainting stolen Cadillacs. The
Hardy Boys come to Libertyville.
Arnie just sat there, not honking, not doing anything and I was about to get out
and ask him what was what when he came back to where I was parked. Even
in the last of the failing light, he looked deeply embarrassed.
"Would you mind honking your horn for me, Dennis?" he said humbly.
"Christine's doesn't seem to work."
"Sure."
"Thanks."
I beeped my horn twice, and after a pause the big garage door went rattling
up. Will Darnell himself was standing there, his belly pushing out over his
belt. He waved Arnie inside impatiently.
I turned my car around, parked it facing out, and went inside myself.
The interior was huge, vault-like, and terribly sil2nt at the end of the day.
There were as many as five dozen slant-parking stalls, each equipped with
its own bolted-down toolbox for do-it-yourselfers who had ailing cars but no
tools. The ceiling overhead was high, and crossed with naked, gantry-like
beams.
Signs were plastered everywhere: ALL TOOLS MUST BE INSPECTED
BEFORE YOU LEAVE and MAKE APPOINTMENT FOR LIFT-TIME IN
ADVANCE and MOTOR MANUALS ON FIRST-COME FIRST-SERVE
BASIS and NO PROFANITY OR SWEARING WILL BE TOLERATED.
Dozens of others; everywhere you turned, one seemed to jump right out at
you. A big sign-man was Will Darnell.
"Stall twenty! Stall twenty!" Darnell yelled at Arnie in his irritable, wheezy
voice. "Get it over there and shut it off before we all choke!"
"We all" seemed to be a group of men at an oversized card-table in the far
corner. Poker-chips, cards, and bottles of beer were scattered across the
table. They were looking at Arnie's new acquisition with varying expressions
of disgust and amusement.
Arnie drove across to stall twenty, parked it, and shut it off. Blue exhaust
drifted in the huge, cavernous space.
Darnell turned to me. He was wearing a sail-like white shirt and brown
khaki pants. Great rolls of fat bulged out his neck and hung in dewlaps from
below his chin.
"Kiddo," he said in that same wheezing voice, "if you sold him that piece of
shit, you ought to be ashamed of yourself."
"I didn't sell it to him." For some absurd reason I felt I had to justify myself
before this fat slob in a way I wouldn't have done before my own father. "I
tried to talk him out of it."
"You should have talked harder." He walked across to where Arnie was
getting out of his car. He slammed the door; rust flaked down from the rocker
panel on that side in a fine red shower.
Asthma or no asthma, Darnell walked with the graceful, almost feminine
movements of a man who has been fat for a long time and sees a long future
of fathood ahead of him. And he was yelling at Arnie before Arnie even got
turned around, asthma or not. I guess you could say he was a man who hadn't
let his infirmities get him down.
Like the kids in the smoking area at school, like Ralph on Basin Drive, like
Buddy Repperton (we'll be talking about him all too soon, I'm afraid), he had
taken an instant dislike to Arnie—it was a case of hate at first sight.
"Okay, that's the last time you run that mechanical asshole in here without the
exhaust hose!" he yelled. "I catch you doin it, you're out, you understand?"
"Yes." Arnie looked small and tired and whipped. Whatever wild energy had
carried him this far was gone now. it broke my heart a little to see him
looking that way. "I—"
Darnell didn't let him get any further. "You want an exhaust hose, that's two-
fifty an hour if you reserve in advance. And I'm telling you something else
right now, and you want to take it to heart, my young friend. I don't take any
shit from you kids. I don't have to. This place is for working guys that got to
keep their cars running so they can put bread on the table, not for rich college
kids who want to go out dragging on the Orange Belt. I don't allow no
smoking in here. If you want a butt, you go outside in the junkyard."
"I don't sm—"
"Don't interrupt me, son. Don't interrupt me and don't get smart," Darnell
said. Now he was standing in front of Arnie. Being both taller and wider, he
blotted my friend out entirely.
I began to get angry again. I could actually feel my body moan in protest at
the yo-yo string my emotions had been on ever since we pulled up to LeBay's
house and saw that the damned car wasn't on the lawn anymore.
Kids are a downtrodden class; after a few years you learn to do your own
version of an Uncle Tom routine on kid-haters like Will Darnell.
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