never
get up
enough courage to ask a girl for a date. Never
once
, in all four years. And
that isn't just one or two kids, it's lots of them. And there are lots of sad girls
who never get asked. It's a shitty way to run things, when you stop to think
about it. A lot of people get hurt. I could dimly imagine the naked terror
Arnie must have felt, waiting for Leigh to come to the phone; the sense of
dread amazement at the idea that he was not planning to ask just any girl out
but
the prettiest girl in school.
"She answered," Arnie went on. "She said "Hello?" and, man, I couldn't say
anything. I tried and nothing came out but this little whistle of air. So she said
"Hello, who is this?" like it might be some kind of practical joke, you know,
and I thought, This is ridiculous. If I can talk to her in the hall, I should be
able to talk to her on the goddam phone, all she can say is no, I mean slid
can't
shoot
me or anything if I ask her for a date. So I said hi, this is Arnie
Cunningham, and she said hi, and blah-blah-blahdy-blah, bullshit-builshit-
bullshit, and then I realized I didn't even know where the hell I wanted to ask
her to go, and we're running out of things to say, pretty soon she's going to
hang up. So I asked her the first thing I could think of, would she want to go
to the football game on Saturday. She said she'd love to go, right off like that,
like she had just been waiting for me to ask her, you know?"
"Probably she was."
"Yeah, maybe." Arnie considered this, bemused.
The bell rang, signifying five minutes to period five. Arnie and I got up. The
cheerleaders trotted off the field, their little skirts flipping saucily.
We climbed down the bleachers, tossed our lunchbags in one of the trash
barrels painted with the school colors orange and black, talk about
Halloween—and walked toward the school.
Arnie was still smiling, recalling the way it had-worked itself out, that first
time with Leigh. "Asking her to the game was sheer desperation."
"Thank a lot," I said. "That" s what I get for playing my heart out every
Saturday afternoon, huh?"
"You know what I mean. Then, after she said she'd go with me, I had this
really horrible thought and called you remember?"
Suddenly I did. He had called to ask me if that game was at home or away
and had seemed absurdly crushed when I told him it was at Hidden Hills.
"So there I was, I've got a date with the prettiest girl in school, I'm crazy
about her, and it turns out to be an away game and my car's in Will's garage."
"You could have taken the bus."
"I know that now, but I didn't then. The bus always used to be full up a week
before the game. I didn't know so many people would stop coming to the
games if the team started losing."
"Don't remind me," I said.
"So I went to Will. I knew Christine could do it, but no way she was street-
legal. I mean, I was desperate."
How desperate?
I wondered coldly and suddenly.
"And he came through for me. Said he understood how important it was, and
if…" Arnie paused; seemed to consider. "And that's the story of the big date,"
he finished gracelessly.
And if…
But that wasn't my business,
Be his eyes, my father had said.
But I pushed that away too.
We were walking past the smoking area now, deserted except for three guys
and two girls, hurriedly finishing a joint. They had it in a makeshift
matchbook roachclip, and the evocative odor of pot, so similar to the aroma
of slowly burning autumn leaves, slipped into my nostrils.
"Seen Buddy Repperton around?" I asked.
"No," he said. "And don't want to. You?"
I had seen him once, hanging out at Vandenberg's Happy Gas, an extra-barrel
service station out on Route 22 in Monroeville. Don Vandenberg's dad
owned it, and the place had been on the ragged edge of going bust ever since
the Arab oil embargo in '73. Buddy hadn't seen me; I was just cruising by.
"Not to talk to."
"You mean he can talk?" Arnie said with a scorn that wasn't like him. "What
a shitter."
I started. That word again. I thought about it, told myself what the fuck, and
asked him where he had gotten that particular term.
He looked at me thoughtfully. The second bell rang suddenly, braying out
from the side of the building. We were going to be late to class, but right then
I didn't care at all.
"You remember that day I bought the car?" he said. "Not the day I put the
deposit on it, but the day I actually bought it?"
"Sure."
"I went in with LeBay while you stayed outside. He had this tiny kitchen with
a red-checked tablecloth on the table. We sat down and he offered me a beer.
I figured I better take it. I really wanted the car, and I didn't want to, you
know, offend him somehow. So we each had a beer and he got off, on this
long, rambling what would you call it? Rant, I guess. This rant about how all
the shitters were against him. It was his word, Dennis. The shitters. He said
it was the shitters that were making him sell his car."
"What did he mean.
"I guess he meant that he was too old to drive, but he wouldn't put it that way.
It was all their fault. The shitters. The shitters wanted him to take a driver's
road-test every two years and an eye exam every year. It was the eye exam
that bothered him. And he said they didn't like him on the street—no one did.
So someone threw a stone at the car.
"I understand all that. But I don't understand why…" Arnie paused in the
doorway, oblivious of the fact that we were late for class. His hands were
shoved into the back pockets of his jeans and he was frowning. "I don't
understand why he let Christine go to rack and ruin like that, Dennis. Like she
was when I bought her. Mostly he talked about her like he really loved her—I
know you thought it was just part of his sales-pitch but it wasn't—and then
near the end, when he was counting the money, he sort of growled, "That
shitting car, I'll be fucked if I know why you want it, boy. It's the ace of
spades." And I said something like I thought I could fix it up really nice. And
he said, "All that and more. If the shitters will let you.""
We went inside. Mr Leheureux, the French teacher, was going someplace
fast, his bald head gleaming under the fluorescent lights. "You boys are late,"
he said in a harried voice that reminded me of the white rabbit in
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