I laughed too loud, a release of tension—I felt the moment passing, and
although part of me didn't want it to pass, part of me did; it was too intense. I
"Yeah, sorry. Dad, do you know what he's into? Darnell?"
"I didn't know then; I didn't want to know, because then I'd be a part of it. I
he'd run them through that garage on Hampton Street; he's not a completely
stupid man, and only an idiot shits where he eats. Maybe hijacking as well."
"Nothing so romantic. If I had to guess, I'd guess cigarettes, mostly—
cigarettes and booze, the two old standbys. Contraband like fireworks.
if the risk looked low. Enough to keep him busy these many years."
He looked at me soberly.
"He's played the odds good, but he's also been lucky for a long time, Dennis.
Oh, maybe he hasn't really needed luck here in town—if it was just
Libertyville, I guess he could go on for ever, or at least until he dropped dead
of a heart attack—but the state tax boys are sand sharks and the feds are
Great Whites. He's been lucky, but one of these days they're going to fall on
him like the Great Wall of China."
"Have you… have you heard things?"
"Not a whisper. Nor am I apt to. But I like Arnie Cunningham a great deal,
and I know you've been worried about this car thing."
"Yeah." He's… he's not acting healthy about it, Dad. Everything's the car, the
car, the car."
"People who have not had a great deal tend to do that," he said. "Sometimes
it's a car, sometimes it's a girl, sometimes it's a career or a musical
instrument or an unhealthy obsession with some famous person. I went to
college with a tall, ugly fellow we all called Stork. With Stork it was his
model train set… he'd been hooked on model trains ever since the third
grade, and his set was pretty damn near the eighth wonder of the world. He
flunked out of Brown the second semester of his freshman year. His grades
were going to hell, and what it came down to was a choice between college
and his Lionels. Stork picked the trains."
"What happened to him?"
"He killed himself in 1961," my father said, and stood up "My point is just
that good people can sometimes get blinded, and it's not always their fault.
Probably Darnell will forget all about him—he'll just be another guy
tinkering around under his car on a crawlie-gator. But if Darnell tries to use
him, you be his eyes, Dennis. Don't let him get pulled into the dance."
"All right. I'll try. But there may not be that much I can do."
"Yeah. How well I know it. Want to go up?"
"Sure."
We went up, and tired as I was, I lay awake a long time. It had been an
eventful day. Outside, a night wind tapped a branch softly against the side of
the house, and far away, downtown, I heard some kid's rod peeling rubber—
it made a sound in the night like an hysterical woman's desperate laughter.