Here we go again, Dennis, last time, after this year you got to learn how to
be a grown-up.
I could hear locker doors crashing closed, could hear the
steady
ka-chonk, ka-chonk, ka-chonk,
of linemen hitting the tackling
dummies, could hear Marty Bellerman yelling exuberantly, "My ass and your
face, Pedersen! Remember that! My ass and your face! It's easier to tell the
fuckin Bobbsey Twins apart!" The dry smell of chalk-dust in the classrooms
in the Math Wing. The sound of the typewriters from the big secretarial
classrooms on the second floor. Mr Meecham, the principal, giving the
announcements at the end of the day in his dry, fussy voice. Lunch outdoors
on the bleachers in good weather. A new crop of freshmen looking dorky and
lost. And at the end of it all, you march down the aisle in this big purple
bathrobe, and that's it. High school's over. You are released on an
unsuspecting world.
"Dennis, do you know Buddy Repperton?" Arnie asked, pulling me out of my
reverie. Our pizza had come.
"Buddy who?"
"Repperton."
The name was familiar. I worked on my side of the pizza and tried to put a
face with it. After a while, it came. I had had a run-in with him when I was
one of the dorky little freshmen. It happened at a mixer dance. The band was
taking a break and I was waiting in the cold-drink line to get a soda.
"Repperton gave me a shove and told me freshmen had to wait until all the
upperclassmen got drinks. He had been a sophomore then, a big, hulking,
mean sophomore. He had a lantern jaw, a thick clot of greasy black hair, and
little eyes set too close together. But those eyes were not entirely stupid; an
unpleasant intelligence lurked in them. He was one of those guys who spend
their high school time majoring in Smoking Area.
I had advanced the heretical opinion that class seniority didn't mean anything
in the refreshment line. Repperton invited me to come outside with him. By
then the cold-drink line had broken up and rearranged itself into one of those
cautious but eager little circles that so often presage a scuffle. One of the
chaperones came along and broke it up. Repperton promised he would get
me, but he never did. And that had been my only contact with him, except for
seeing his name every now and then on the detention list that circulated to the
home rooms at the end of the day. It seemed to me that he'd been dismissed
from school a couple of times, too, and when that happened it was usually a
pretty good sign that the guy wasn't in the Young Christian League.
I told Arnie about my one experience with Repperton, and he nodded
wearily. He touched the shiner, which was now turning a gruesome lemon
color. "He was the one."
"Repperton messed up your face?"
"Yeah."
Arnie told me he knew Repperton from the auto-shop courses. One of the
ironies of Arnie's rather hunted and certainly unhappy school life was that his
interests and abilities took him into direct contact with the sort of people
who feel it is their appointed duty to kick the stuffing out of the Arnie
Cunninghams of this world.
When Arnie was a sophomore and taking a course called Engine
Fundamentals (which used to be plain old Auto Shop I before the school got
a whole bunch of vocational training money from the Federal government), a
kid named Roger Gilman beat the living shit out of him. That's pretty fucking
vulgar, I know, but there's just no fancy, elegant way to put it. Gilman just
beat the living shit out of Arnie. The beating was bad enough to keep Arnie
out of school for a couple of days, and Gilman got a one-week vacation,
courtesy of the management. Gilman was now in prison on a hijacking
charge. Buddy Repperton had been part of Roger Gilman's circle of friends
and had more or less inherited leadership of Gilman's group.
For Arnie, going to class in the shop area was like visiting a demilitarized
zone. Then, if he got back alive after period seven, he'd run all the way to the
other end of the school with his chessboard and men under his arm for a
chess club meeting or a game.
I remember going to a city chess tourney in Squirrel Hill one day the year
before and seeing something which, to me, symbolized my friend's schizo
school-life. There he was, hunched gravely over his board in the thick,
carved silence which is mostly what you hear at such affairs. After a long,
thoughtful pause, he moved a rook with a hand into which grease and motor-
oil had been so deeply grimed that not even Boraxo would take it all out.
Of course not all the shoppies were out to get him; there were plenty of good
kids down that way, but a lot of them were either into their own tight circles
of friends or permanently stoned. The ones in the tight little cliques were
usually from the poorer section of Libertyville (and don't ever let anyone tell
you high school students aren't tracked according to what part of town they
come from; they are), very serious and so quiet you might make the mistake
of dismissing them as stupid. Most of them looked like the leftovers from
1968 with their long hair tied back in ponytails and their jeans and their tie-
dyed T-shirts, but in 1978 none of these guys wanted to overthrow the
government; they wanted to grow up to be Mr Goodwrench.
And shop is still the final stopping place for the misfits and hardasses who
aren't so much attending school as they are being incarcerated there. And
now that Arnie brought up Repperton's name, I could think of several guys
who circled him like a planetary system. Most of them were twenty and still
struggling to get out of school. Don Vandenberg, Sandy Galton, Moochie
Welch. Moochie's real name was Peter, but the kids all called him Moochie
because you always saw him outside of the rock concerts in Pittsburgh,
spare-changing odd dimes from the crowd.
Buddy Repperton had come by a two-year-old blue Camaro that had been
rolled over a couple of times out on Route 46 near Squantic Hills State Park
—he picked it up from one of Darnell's poker buddies, Arnie said. The
engine was okay, but the body had really taken chong from the ton in the
rollover. Repperton brought it into Darnell's about a week after Arnie
brought Christine in, although, Buddy had been hanging around even before
then.
For the first couple of days, Repperton hadn't appeared to notice Arnie at all,
and Arnie, of course, was just as happy not to be noticed. Repperton was on
good terms with Darnell, though. He seemed to have no trouble obtaining
high-demand tools that were usually only available on a reserve basis.
Then Repperton bad started getting on Arnie's case. He'd walk by on his way
back from the Coke machine or the bathroom and knocked a boxful of
balljoint wrench attachments that Arnie was using all over the floor in
Amie's stall. Or if Arnie had a coffee on the shelf, Repperton would manage
to hit it with his elbow and spill it. Then he'd bugle "Well ex
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