But, Jesus, he was laying it on thick.
I suddenly grabbed Darnell's arm. "Sir?"
"What?"
"Those men over there are smoking. You better tell them to stop." I pointed to
the guys at the poker table. They had dealt out a fresh hand. Smoke hung over
the table in a blue haze.
Darnell looked at them, then back at me. His face wag very solemn, "You
trying to help your buddy right out of here, Junior?"
"No," I said. "Sir.
"Then shut your pie-hole."
He turned back to Arnie and put his meaty hands on his wide, well-padded
hips.
"I know a creep when I see one," he said, "and I think I'm looking at one right
now. You're on probation, kid. You screw around with me just one time and it
don't matter how much you paid up in front, I'll put you out on your ass."
Dull fury went up from my stomach to my head and made it throb. Inside I
begged Arnie to tell this fat fuck to bore it and stroke it and then drive it
straight up his old tan track just as fast and far as it would go. Of course then
Darnell's poker buddies would get into it and we'd both probably end this
enchanting evening at the emergency room of Libertyville Community
Hospital getting our heads stitched up but it would almost be worth it.
Arnie,
I begged inside,
tell him to shove it and let's get out of here. Stand
up to him, Arnie. Don't let him pull this shit on you. Don't be a loser,
Arnie-if you can stand up to your mother, you can stand up to this happy
asshole. Just this once, don't be a loser.
Arnie stood silent for a long time, his head down, and then he said, "Yessir."
The word was so low it was nearly inaudible. It sounded as if he was
choking on it.
"What did you say?"
Arnie looked up. His face was deadly pale. His eye's were swimming with
tears. I couldn't look at that. It hurt me too bad to look at that. I turned away.
The poker players had suspended their game to watch developments over at
stall twenty.
"I said, 'Yessir,'" Arnie said in a trembling voice. It was as if he had just
signed his name to some terrible confession. I looked at the car again, the '58
Plymouth, sitting in here when it should have been out back in the junkyard
with the rest of Darnells rotten plugs, and I hated it all over again for what it
was doing to Arnie.
"Arright, get out of here," Darnell said. "We're closed."
Arnie stumbled away blindly. He would have walked right into a stack of old
bald tires if I hadn't grabbed his arm and steered him away. Darnell went
back the other way to the poker table. When he got there he said something to
the others in his wheezy voice. They all roared with laughter.
"I'm all right, Dennis," Arnie said, as if I had asked him. His teeth were
locked together and his chest was heaving in quick, shallow breaths. "I'm all
right, let go of me, I'm all right, I'm okay."
I let go of his arm. We walked across to the door and Darnell hollered at us,
"And you ain't going to bring your hoodlum friends in here, or you're out!"
One of the others chimed, "And leave your dope at home!"
Arnie cringed. He was my friend, but I hated him when he cringed that way.
We escaped into the cool darkness. The door rattled down behind us. And
that's how we got Christine to Darnell's Garage. Some great time, huh?