10 LeBAY PASSES
I got no car and it's breakin my heart,
But I got a driver, and that's a start…
— Lennon and McCartney
The movie version of
Grease
had just opened, and I took the cheerleader out
to see it that night. I thought it was dumb. The cheerleader loved it. I sat
there, watching these totally unreal teenagers dance and sing (if I want
realistic
teenagers—well, more or less—I'll catch
The Blackboard Jungle
sometime on a revival), and my mind just drifted away. And suddenly I had a
brainstorm, the way you sometimes will when you're not thinking about
anything in particular.
I excused myself and went into the lobby to use the pay-phone. I called
Arnie's house, dialing quick and sure, I'd had his number memorized since I
was eight or so. I could have waited until the movie was over, but it just
seemed like such a damned good idea.
Arnie answered himself. "Hello?"
"Arnie, it's Dennis."
"Oh. Dennis."
His voice sounded so odd and flat that I got a little scared.
"Arnie? Are you all right?"
"Huh? Sure. I thought you were taking Roseanne to the movies."
"That's where I'm calling from."
"It must not be that exciting," Arnie said. His voice was still flat—flat and
dreary.
"Roseanne thinks it's great."
I thought that would get a laugh out of him but there was only a patient,
waiting silence.
"Listen," I said, "I thought of the answer."
"Answer?"
"Sure," I said, "LeBay. LeBay's the answer."
"Le—" he said in a strange, high voice… and then there was more silence. I
was starting to get more than a little scared. I'd never known him to be quite
this way.
"Sure," I babbled. "LeBay. LeBay's got a garage, and I got the idea that he'd
eat a dead-rat sandwich if the profit margin looked high enough. If you were
to approach him on the basis of, say, sixteen or seventeen bucks a week—"
"Very funny, Dennis." His voice was cold and hateful.
"Arnie, what—"
He hung up.
I stood there, looking at the phone, wondering what the hell it was about.
Some new move from his parents? Or had he maybe gone back to Darnell's
and found some new damage to his car? Or—
A sudden intuition—almost a certainty—struck me. I put the telephone back
in its cradle and walked over to the concession stand and asked if they had
today's paper. The candy-and-popcorn girl finally fished it out and then stood
there snapping her gum while I thumbed to the back, where they print the
obituaries. I guess she wanted to make sure I wasn't going to perform some
weird perversion on it, or maybe eat it.
There was nothing at all—or so I thought at first. Then I turned the page and
saw the headline. LIBERTYVILLE VETERAN DIES AT 71. There was a
picture of Roland D. LeBay in his Army uniform, looking twenty years
younger and considerably more bright-eyed than he had on the occasions
Arnie and I had seen him. The obit was brief. LeBay had died suddenly on
Saturday afternoon, He was survived by a brother, George, and a sister,
Marcia. Funeral services were scheduled for Tuesday at two.
Suddenly.
In the obits " it's always "after a long illness", "after a short illness", or
"suddenly". Suddenly can mean anything from a brain embolism to
electrocuting yourself in the bathtub. I remembered something I had done to
Ellie when she was hardly more than a baby—three, maybe. I scared the
bejesus out of her with a Jack-in-the-box. There was the little handle going
around in big brother Dennis's hand, making music. Not bad. Kind of fun.
And then—
ka-BONZO!
Out comes this guy with grinning face and an ugly
hooked nose, almost hitting her in the eye. Ellie went off bawling to find her
mother and I sat there, looking glumly at Jack as he nodded back and forth,
knowing I was probably going to get hollered at, knowing that I probably
deserved
to get hollered at—I had known it was going to scare her, coming
out of the music like that, all at once, with an ugly bang.
Coming out so suddenly.
I gave the paper back and stood there, looking blankly at the posters
advertising NEXT ATTRACTION and COMING SOON.
Saturday afternoon.
Suddenly.
Funny how things sometimes worked out. My brainstorm had been that maybe
Arnie could take Christine back where she had come from; maybe he could
pay LeBay for space. Now it turned out that LeBay was dead. He had died,
as a matter of fact, on the same day that Arnie had gotten into it with Buddy
Repperton—the same day Buddy had smashed Christine's headlight.
All at once I had an irrational picture of Buddy Repperton swinging the
jackhandle—
and at the exact same moment,
LeBay's eye gushes blood, he
keels over, and suddenly, very suddenly…
Cut the shit, Dennis,
I lectured.
Just cut the
—
And then, somewhere deep in my mind, somewhere near the center, a voice
whispered
Come on, big guy. Let's cruise
—and then fell still.
The girl behind the counter popped her gum and said, "You're missing the end
of the picture. Ending's the best part."
"Yeah, thanks."
I started back toward the door of the theatre and then detoured to the drinking
fountain. My throat was very dry.
Before I'd finished getting my drink, the doors opened and people came
streaming out. Beyond and above their bobbing heads, I could see the credit-
roll. Then Roseanne came out, looking around for me. She caught many
appreciative glances and fielded them cleanly in that dreamy, composed way
of hers.
"Den-Den," she said, taking my arm. Being called Den-Den isn't the worst
thing in the world—having your eyes put out with a hot poker or having a leg
amputated with a chainsaw is probably worse—but I've never really dug it
all that much. "Where were you? You missed the ending. Ending's—"
"—the best part," I finished with her. "Sorry. I just had this call of nature. It
came on very suddenly."
"I'll tell you all about it if you take me up to the Embankment for a while,"
she said, pressing my arm against the soft sideswell of her breast. "If you
want to talk, that is."
"Did it have a happy ending?"
She smiled up at me, her eyes wide and sweet and a little dazed, as they
always were. She held my arm even more tightly against her breast.
"Very happy," she said. "I like happy endings, don't you, Den-Den?"
"Love them," I said. I should maybe have been thinking about the promise of
her breast, but instead I found myself thinking about Arnie.
That night I had a dream again, only in this one Christine was old—no, not
just old; she was ancient, a terrible hulk of a car, something you'd expect to
see in a Tarot deck: instead of the Hanged Man, the Death Car. Something
you could almost believe was as old as the pyramids. The engine roared and
missed and jetted filthy blue oilsmoke.
It wasn't empty. Roland D. LeBay was lolling behind the wheel. His eyes
were open but they were glazed and dead. Each time the engine revved and
Christine's rust-eaten body vibrated, he flopped like a ragdoll. His peeling
skull nodded back and forth.
Then the tires screamed their terrible scream, the Plymouth lunged out of the
garage at me, and as it did the rust melted away, the old, bleary glass
clarified, the chrome winked with savage newness, and the old, balding tires
suddenly bloomed into plump new Wide Ovals, each tread seemingly as deep
as the Grand Canyon.
It screamed at me, headlights glaring white circles of hate, and as I raised my
hands in a stupid, useless, warding-off gesture, I thought,
God, it's unending
fury
—
I woke up.
I didn't scream. That night I kept the scream in my throat.
Just barely.
I sat up in my bed. A cold puddle of moonlight caught me in a lapful of sheet,
and I thought,
Died suddenly.
That night I didn't get back to sleep so quickly.
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