15 FOOTBALL WOES
Learn to work the saxophone,
I play just what I feel,
Drink Scotch whisky
All night long,
And die behind the wheel
— Steely Dan
School started, and nothing much happened for a week or two. Arnie didn't
find out I'd been down to the garage, and I was glad. I don't think he would
have taken kindly to the news. Darnell kept his mouth shut as he had
promised (probably for his own reasons). I called Michael one afternoon
after school when I knew Arnie would be down at the garage. I told him
Arnie had done some stuff to the car, but it was nowhere near street-legal. I
told him my impression was that Arnie was mostly farting around. Michael
greeted this news with a mixture of relief and surprise, but that ended it… for
a while.
Arnie himself flickered in and out of my view, like something you see from
the corner of your eye. He was around the halls, and we had three classes
together, and he sometimes came over after school or on weekends. There
were times when it really seemed as if nothing had changed. But he was at
Darnell's a lot more than he was at my house, and on Friday nights he went
out to Philly Plains—the stock-car track—with Darnell's half-bright
handyman, Jimmy Sykes. They ran out sportsters and charger-class racers,
mostly Camaros and Mustangs with all their glass knocked out and roll bars
installed. They took them out on Darnell's flatbed and came back with fresh
junk for the automobile graveyard.
It was around that time that Arnie hurt his back. It wasn't a serious injury—or
so he claimed—but my mother noticed that something was wrong with him
almost right away. He came over one Sunday to watch the Phillies, who were
pounding down the home-stretch to moderate glory that year, and happened to
get up during the third inning to pour us each a glass of orange juice. My
mother was sitting on the couch with my father, reading a book. She glanced
up when Arnie came back in and said, "You're limping, Arnie."
I thought I saw a surprising, unexpected expression on Arnie's face for a
second or two—a furtive, almost guilty look. I could have been wrong. If it
was
there, it was gone a second later.
"I guess I strained my back out at the Plains last night," he said, giving me my
orange juice. "Jimmy Sykes stalled out the last of the clunks we were loading
just when it was almost up on the bed of the truck. I could see it rolling back
down and then the two of us goofing around for another two hours, trying to
get it started again. So I gave it a shove. Guess I shouldn't have."
It seemed like an elaborate explanation for a simple little limp, but I could
have been wrong about that too.
"You have to be more careful of your back," my mother said severely. "The
Lord—"
"Mom, could we watch the game now?" I asked.
"—only gives you one," she finished.
"Yes, Mrs Guilder," Arnie said dutifully.
Elaine wandered in. "Is there any more juice, or did you two coneheads drink
it all?"
"Come on, give me a break!" I yelled. There had been some sort of disputed
play at second and I had missed the whole thing.
"Don't shout at your sister, Dennis," my father muttered from the depths of
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