And besides
, I thought,
you had this hot date, right?
"It's not dangerous, is it?" Leigh asked, addressing the question somewhere
between Arnie and me. Her brow had creased slightly—I think maybe she
sensed a sudden cold current between Arnie and me.
"No," I said. "I don't think so. When you ride with Arnie you're riding with
the original Old Creeping Jesus anyway."
That broke the odd little pocket of tension that had built up. From the playing
field there was a discordant shriek of brass, and then the band instructor's
voice, carrying to us, thin but perfectly clear under the low sky:
"Again,
please! This is Rodgers and Hammerstein, not rock and ro-ool! Again,
please!"
The three of us looked at each other. Arnie and I started to laugh, and after a
moment Leigh joined in. Looking at her, I felt that momentary jealousy again.
I wanted nothing but the best for my friend Arnie, but she was really
something—seventeen going on eighteen, gorgeous, perfect, healthy, alive to
everything in her world. Roseanne was beautiful in her way, but Leigh made
Roseanne look like a tree-sloth taking a nap.
Was that when I started to want her? When I started to want my best friend's
girl? Yeah, I suppose it was. But I swear to you, I never would have put a
move on her if things had happened differently. I just don't think they were
meant to happen differently. Or maybe I just have to feel that way.
We better go, Arnie, or we won't get a good seat in the visitors' bleachers,"
Leigh said with ladylike sarcasm.
Arnie smiled. She was still holding his arm lightly, and he looked rather
bowled over by it all. Why not? If it had been me, having my first experience
with a live girl, and one as pretty as Leigh, I would have been three-quarters
to being in love with her already. I wished him nothing but well with her. I
guess I want you to believe that, even if you don't believe anything else I
have to tell you from here on out. If anyone deserved a little happiness, it
was Arnie.
The rest of the team had gone into the visitors' dressing rooms at the back of
the gymnasium wing of the school, and now Coach Puffer poked his head out.
"Do you think you could favor us with your presence, Mr Guilder?" he
called. "I know it's a lot to ask, and I hope you'll forgive me if you had
something more important to do, but if you don't, would you get your tail
down into this locker room?"
I muttered to Arnie and Leigh, "This is Rodgers and Hammerstein, not rock
and ro-ool," and trotted toward the building.
I walked toward the dressing rooms—Coach had popped back inside—and
Arnie and Leigh started across to the bleachers. Halfway to the doors I
stopped and went back to Christine. Late to suit up or not, I approached her
in a circle; that absurd prejudice against walking in front of the car still held.
On the rear end I saw a Pennsylvania dealer plate held on with a spring. I
flipped it down and saw a Dymo tape stuck to the back side: THIS PLATE
PROPERTY OF DARNELL's GARAGE, LIBERTYVILLE, PA.
I let the plate snap back and stood up, frowning. Darnell had given him a
sticker while his car was still a ways from being street-legal; Darnell had
loaned him a dealer plate so he could use the car to bring Leigh to the game.
Also, he had stopped being "Darnell" to Arnie; today he had called him
"Will". Interesting, but not very comforting.
I wondered if Arnie was dumb enough to think that the Will Darnells of this
world ever did favors out of the goodness of their hearts. I hoped he wasn't,
but I wasn't sure. I wasn't sure of much about Arnie anymore. He had changed
a lot in the last few weeks.
We surprised the hell out of ourselves and won the game—as it turned out,
that was one of only two we won that whole season… not that I was with the
team when the season ended.
We had no right to win; we went out on the field feeling like losers, and we
lost the toss. The Hillmen (dumb name for a team, but what's so bright about
being known as the Terriers when you get right down to it?) went forty yards
on their first two plays, going through our defensive line like cheese through
a goose. Then, on the third play—their third first-and-ten in a row—their
quarterback coughed up the ball. Gary Tardiff grabbed it up and rambled
sixty yards for the score, a great big grin on his face.
The Hillmen and their coach went bananas protesting that the ball had been
dead at the line of scrimmage, but the officials disagreed and we led 6-0.
From my place on the bench I was able to look across at the visitors'
bleachers and could see that the few Libertyville fans there were going crazy.
I guess they had a right to; it was the first time we'd led in a game all season.
Arnie and Leigh were waving Terriers pennants. I waved at them. Leigh saw
me, waved back, then elbowed Arnie. He waved back too. They looked as if
they were getting pretty chummy up there, which made me grin.
As for the game, we never looked back after that first flukey score. We had
that mystic thing, momentum, on our side—maybe for the only time that year.
I didn't break the Conference touchdown record as Arnie had predicted, but I
scored three times, one of them on a ninety-yard runback, the longest I ever
made. At halftime it was 17-0, and Coach was a new man. He saw a
complete turnaround ahead of us, the greatest comeback in the history of the
Conference. Of course that turned out to be a fool's dream, but he surely was
excited that day, and I felt good for him, as I had for Arnie and Leigh, getting
to know each other so profitably and easily.
The second half was not so good; our defense resumed the mostly prone
posture it had assumed in our first three games, but it was still never really
close. We won 27-18.
Coach had taken me out halfway through the fourth quarter to put in Brian
McNally, who would be replacing me next year—actually even earlier than
that, as it turned out. I showered and changed up, then came back out just as
the two-minute warning went off.
The parking lot was full of cars but empty of people. Wild cheering came
from the field as the Hillmen fans urged their team to do the impossible in the
last two minutes of play. From this distance it all seemed as unimportant as it
undoubtedly was.
I walked over toward Christine.
There she sat with her rust-flecked sides and her new bonnet and her tailfins
that seemed a thousand miles along. A dinosaur from the dark ditty-bop days
of the '50s when all the oil millionaires were from Texas and the Yankee
dollar was kicking the shit out of the Japanese yen instead of the other way
around. Back in the days when Carl Perkins was singing about pink pedal
pushers and Johnny Horton was singing about dancing all night on a honky-
tonk hardwood floor and the biggest teen idol in the country was Edd
"Kookie" Byrnes.
I touched Christine. I tried to caress it as Arnie had done, to like it for
Arnie's sake as Leigh had done. Surely if anyone should be able to make
himself like it, it should be me. Leigh had only known Arnie a month. I had
known him my whole life.
I slipped my hand along the rusty surface and I thought of George LeBay, and
Veronica and Rita LeBay, and somewhere along the line the hand that was
supposed to be caressing closed into a fist and I suddenly slammed it down
on Christine's flank as hard as I could—plenty hard enough to hurt my hand
and make myself utter a defensive little laugh and wonder what the hell I
thought I was doing.
The sound of rust sitting down onto the hottop in small flakes.
The sound of a bass drum from the football field, like a giant's heartbeat.
The sound of my own heartbeat.
I tried the front door.
It was locked.
I licked my lips and realized I was scared.
It was almost as if—this was very funny, this was hilarious—it was almost
as if this car didn't like me, as if it suspected me of wanting to come between
it and Arnie, and that the reason I didn't want to walk in front of it was
because—
I laughed again and then remembered my dream and stopped laughing. This
was too much like it for comfort. It wasn't Chubby McCarthy blaring over the
PA, of course, not in Hidden Hills, but the rest of it brought on a dreamy,
unpleasant sense of
dejrvu
—the sound of the cheers, the sound of padded
body contact, the wind hissing through trees that looked like cutouts under an
overcast sky.
The engine would gun. The car would lurch forward, drop back, lurch
forward, drop back. And then the tires would scream as it roared right at me
—
I shook the thought off. It was time to stop pandering to myself with all of this
crazy shit. It was time—and overtime—to get my imagination under control.
This was a car, not a she but an it, not really Christine at all but only a 1958
Plymouth Fury that had rolled off an assembly line in Detroit along with
about four hundred thousand others.
It worked… at least temporarily. Just to demonstrate how little afraid of it I
was, I got down on my knees and looked under it. What I saw there was even
crazier than the haphazard way the car was being rebuilt on top. There were
three new Pleasurizer shocks, but the fourth was a dark, oil-caked ruin that
looked as if it had been on there for ever. The exhaust was so new it was still
silvery, but the silencer looked at least middle-aged and the header pipe was
in very bad shape. Looking at the header, thinking about exhaust fumes that
could leak into the car from it, made me flash on Veronica LeBay again.
Because exhaust fumes can kill. They—
"Dennis, what are you doing?"
I guess I was still more uneasy than I thought, because I was up from my
knees like a shot with my heart beating in my throat. It was Arnie. He looked
cold and angry.
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