You really like her, guys, don't you? She's
all right, isn't she, guys? I didn't fuck up too bad, did I, guys? I mean, this
is probably just a bad dream and I'll wake up pretty soon, right? Right?
Right?
"Sure," I said into the telephone. That whole stupid, ugly Freddy Darlington
business had gone through my mind in maybe two seconds. "I see what you
mean, Arnie."
"Good," he said, relieved.
"Just watch out for your ass. And that goes double when you get back to
school. Keep away from Buddy Repperton."
"Yeah. You bet."
"Arnie—"
"What?"
I paused. I wanted to ask him if Darnell had said anything about Christine
being in his shop before, if he had recognized her. Even more, I wanted to
tell him what had happened to Mrs LeBay and to her small daughter, Rita.
But I couldn't. He would know right away where I had gotten the information.
And in his touchy state over the damn car, he would be apt to think I had gone
behind his back—and in a way I had. But to tell him I had might well mean
the end of our friendship.
I had had enough of Christine, but I still cared for Arnie. Which meant that
door had to be closed for good. No more creeping around and asking
questions. No more lectures.
"Nothing," I said. "I was just going to say that I guess you found a home for
your rustbucket. Congratulations."
"Dennis, are you eating something?"
"Yeah, a chicken sandwich. Why?"
"You're chewing in my ear. It really sounds gross."
I began to smack as loudly as I could. Arnie made puking sounds. We both
got laughing, and it was good—it was like the old days before he married
that numb fucking car.
"You're an asshole, Dennis."
"That's right. I learned it from you.
"Get bent," he said, and hung up.
I finished my sandwich and my Hawaiian Punch, rinsed the plate and the
glass and went back into the living room, ready to shower and go to bed. I
was beat.
Sometime during our phone conversation I had heard the TV go off and had
assumed that my father had gone upstairs. But he hadn't. He was sitting in his
recliner chair with his shirt open. I noticed with some unease how gray the
hair on his chest was getting, and the way the reading lamp beside him shone
through the hair on his head and showed his pink scalp. Getting thinner up
there. My father was no kid. I realized with greater unease that in five years,
by the time I would theoretically finish college, he would be fifty and balding
—a stereotype accountant. Fifty in five years if he didn't just drop dead of
another heart attack. The first one had not been bad—no myocardial scarring,
he had told me on the one occasion I had asked. But he did not try to tell me
that a second heart attack wasn't likely. I knew it was, my mom knew it was,
and he did too. Only Ellie still thought he was invulnerable—but hadn't I
seen a question in her eyes once or twice? I thought maybe I had.
Died suddenly.
I felt the hairs on my scalp stir.
Suddenly
. Straightening up at his desk,
clutching his chest.
Suddenly
. Dropping his racket on the tennis court. You
didn't want to think those thoughts about your father, but sometimes they
come. God knows they do.
"I couldn't help overhearing some of that," he said.
"Yeah?" Warily.
"Has Arnie Cunningham got his foot in a bucket of something warm and
brown, Dennis?"
"I… I don't know for sure," I said slowly. Because, after all, what did I
have? Vapors, that was all.
"You want to talk about it?"
"Not right now, Dad, if it's okay."
"It's fine," he said. "But if it… as you said on the phone, if it gets heavy, will
you for God's sake tell me what's happening?"
"Yes."
"Okay." I started for the Stairs and was almost there when he stopped me by
saying, "I ran Will Darnell's accounts and did his income-tax returns for
almost fifteen years, you know."
I turned back to him, really surprised.
"No. I didn't know that."
My father smiled. It was a smile I had never seen before, one I would guess
my mother had seen only a few times, my sis maybe not at all. You might
have thought it was a sleepy sort of smile at first, if you looked more closely
you would have seen that it was not sleepy at all—it was cynical and hard
and totally aware.
"Can you keep your mouth shut about something, Dennis?"
"Yes," I said. "I think so."
"Don't just think so."
"Yes. I can."
"Better. I did his figures up until 1975, and then he got Bill Upshaw over in
Monroeville."
My father looked at me closely.
"I won't say that Bill Upshaw is a crook, but I will say that his scruples are
thin enough to read a newspaper through. And last year he bought himself a
$300,000 English Tudor in Sewickley, Damn the interest rates, full speed
ahead."
He gestured at our own home with a small sweep of his right arm and then let
it drop back into his own lap. He and my mother had bought it the year before
I was born for $62,000—it was now worth maybe $150,000—and they had
only recently gotten their paper back from the bank. We had a little party in
the back yard late last summer; Dad lit the barbecue, put the pink slip on the
long fork, and each of us got a chance at holding it over the coals until it was
gone.
"No English Tudor here, huh, Denny?" he said.
"It's fine," I said. I came back and sat down on the couch.
"Darnell and I parted amicably enough," my father went on, "not that I ever
cared very much for him in a personal way. I thought he was a wretch."
I nodded a little, because I liked that; it expressed my gut feelings about Will
Darnell better than any profanity could.
"But there's all the difference in the world between a personal relationship
and a business relationship. You learn that very quickly in this business, or
you give it up and start selling Fuller Brushes door-to-door. Our business
relationship was good, as far as it went… but it didn't go far enough. That
was why I finally called it quits."
"I don't get you."
"Cash kept showing up," he said. "Large amounts of cash with no clear
ancestry. At Darnell's direction I invested in two corporations—
Pennsylvania Solar Heating and New York Ticketing—that sounded like two
of the dummiest dummy corporations I've ever heard of. Finally I went to see
him, because I wanted all my cards on the table. I told him that my
professional opinion was that, if he got audited either by the IRS or by the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania tax boys, he was apt to have a great deal of
explaining to do, and that before long I was going to know too much to be an
asset to him."
"What did he say?"
"He began to dance," my father said, still wearing that sleepy, cynical smile.
"In my business, you start to get familiar with the steps of the dance by the
time you're thirty-eight or so if you're good at your business, that is. And I'm
not all that bad, The dance starts off with the guy asking you if you're happy
with your work, if it's paying you enough. If you say you like the work but
you sure could be doing better, the guy encourages you to talk about whatever
you're carrying on your back: your house, your car, your kids' college
education—maybe you've got a wife with a taste for clothes a little fancier
than she can by rights afford… see?"
"Sounding you out?"
"It's more like feeling you up," he said, and then laughed. "But yeah. The
dance is every bit as mannered as a minuet. There are all sorts of phrases and
pauses and steps. After the guy finds out what sort of financial burdens you'd
like to get rid of, he starts asking you what sort of things you'd like to have. A
Cadillac, a summer place in the Catskills or the Poconos, maybe a boat.
I gave a little start at that, because I knew my dad wanted a boat about as
badly as he wanted anything these days; a couple of times I had gone with
him on sunny summer afternoons to marinas along King George Lake and
Lake Passeeonkee. He'd price out the smaller yachts and I'd see the wistful
look in his eyes. Now I understood it. They were out of his reach. Maybe if
his life had taken a different turn—if he didn't have kids to think about putting
through college, for instance—they wouldn't have been.
"And you said no?" I asked him.
He shrugged. "I made it clear pretty early on that I didn't want to dance. For
one thing, it would have meant getting more involved with him on a personal
level, and, as I said, I thought he was a skunk. For another thing, these guys
are all fundamentally stupid about numbers—which is why so many of them
have gone up on tax convictions. They think you can hide illegal income.
They're sure of it. He laughed. "They've all got this mystic idea that you can
wash money like you wash clothes, when all you can really do is juggle it
until something falls down and smashes all over your head."
"Those were the reasons?"
"Two out of three." He looked in my eyes. "I'm no fucking crook, Dennis."
There was a moment of electric communication between us—even now, four
years later, I get goosebumps thinking of it, although I'm by no means sure that
I can get it across to you. It wasn't that he treated me like an equal for the first
time that night; it wasn't even that he was showing me the wistful knight-
errant still hiding inside the button-down man scrambling for a living in a
dirty, hustling world. I think it was sensing him as a
reality
, a person who
had existed long before I ever came onstage, a person who had eaten his
share of mud. In that moment I think I could have imagined him making love
to my mother, both of them sweaty and working hard to make it, and not have
been embarrassed.
Then he dropped his eyes, grinned a defensive grin, and did his husky Nixon-
voice, which he was very good at: "You people deserve to know if your
father is a crook. Well, I am not a crook, I could have taken the money, but
that…
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |