For
-ty one per
cent!
shortly after
Arnie bought his car), and decided it wasn't anything Arnie would want to
hear not in his present mood.
"Just liability?"
They were passing under a reflecting sign which read LEFT LANE FOR
AIRPORT. Arnie put on his blinker and changed lanes. Michael seemed to
relax a little.
"You can't get collision insurance until you're twenty-one. I mean that; those
shitting insurance companies are all as rich as Croesus, but they won't cover
you unless the odds are stacked
outrageously
in their favor." There was a
bitter, somehow weakly peevish note in Arnie's voice that Michael had never
heard there before, and although he said nothing, he was startled and a little
dismayed by his son's choice of words—he had assumed Arnie used that sort
of language with his peers (or so he later told Dennis Guilder, apparently
totally unaware of the fact that, up until his senior year, Arnie had really had
no peers except for Guilder), but he had never used it in front of Regina and
himself.
"Your driving record and whether or not you had driver ed don't have
anything to do with it," Arnie went on. "The reason you can't get collision is
because their fucking actuarial tables
say
you can't get collision. You can get
it at twenty-one only if you're willing to spend a fortune—usually the
premiums end up being more than the car books for until you're twenty-three
or so, unless you're married. Oh, the shitters have got it all figured out. They
know how to walk it right to you, all right."
Up ahead the airport lights glowed, runways outlined in mystic parallels of
blue light. "If anyone ever asks me what the lowest form of human life is, I'll
tell them it's an insurance agent."
"You've made quite a study of it," Michael commented. He didn't quite dare
to say anything else; Arnie seemed only waiting to fly into a fresh rage.
"I went around to five different companies. In spite of what Mom said, I'm
not anxious to throw my money away."
"And straight liability was the best you could do?"
"Yeah, that's right. Six hundred and fifty dollars a year."
Michael whistled.
"That's right," Arnie agreed.
Another twinkling sign, advising that the two left-hand lanes were for
parking, the right lanes for departures. At the entrance to the parking lot, the
way split again. To the right was an automated gate where you took a ticket
for short-term parking. To the left was the glass booth where the parking-lot
attendant sat, watching a small black-and-white TV and smoking a cigarette.
Arnie sighed. "Maybe you're right. Maybe this is the best solution all the way
around.".
"Of course it is," Michael said, relieved. Arnie sounded more like his old
self now, and that hard light had died out of his eyes at last. "Ten months,
that's all."
"Sure."
He drove up to the booth, and the attendant, a young guy in a black-and-
orange high school sweater with the Libertyville logo on the pockets, pushed
back the glass partition and leaned out. "Help ya?"
"I'd like a thirty-day ticket," Arnie said, digging for his wallet.
Michael put his hand over Arnie's. "This one's my treat," he said.
Arnie pushed his hand away gently but firmly and took his wallet out. "It's my
car," he said. "I'll pay my own way."
"I only wanted—" Michael began.
"I know," Arnie said. "But I mean it."
Michael sighed. "I know you do. You and you mother. Everything will be fine
if you do it my way."
Arnie's lips tightened momentarily, and then he smiled. "Well… yeah," he
said.
They looked at each other and both burst out laughing.
At the instant that they did, Christine stalled. Up until then the engine had
been ticking over with unobtrusive perfection. Now it just quit; the oil and
amp dash lamps came on.
Michael raised his eyebrows. "Say what?"
"I don't know," Arnie answered, frowning. "It never did that before."
He turned the key, and the engine started at once.
"Nothing, I guess," Michael said.
"I'll want to check the timing later in the week," Arnie muttered. He gunned
the engine and listened carefully. And in that instant, Michael thought that
Arnie didn't look like his son at all. He looked like someone else, someone
much older and harder. He felt a brief but extremely nasty lance of fear in his
chest.
"Hey, do you want this ticket or are you just gonna sit there all night talkin
about your timing?" the parking-lot attendant asked. He looked vaguely
familiar to Arnie, the way people do when you've seen them moving around
in the corridors at school but don't have anything else to do with them.
"Oh yeah. Sorry." Arnie passed him a five-dollar bill, and the attendant gave
him a time-ticket.
"Back of the lot," the attendant said. "Be sure to revalidate it five days before
the end of the month if you want the same space again."
"Right."
Arnie drove to he back of the lot, Christine's shadow growing and shrinking
as they passed under the hooded arc-sodium lights. He found a vacant space
and backed Christine in. As he turned off the key, he grimaced and put a hand
to his lower back.
"That still bothering you?" Michael asked.
"Only a little," Arnie said. "I was almost over it, and it came back on me
yesterday. I must have lifted something wrong. Don't forget to lock your
door."
They got out and locked up. Once out of the car, Michael felt better—he felt
closer to his son, and, maybe just as important, he felt less that he had played
the impotent fool with his jingling cap of bells in the argument that had taken
place earlier. Once out of the car, he felt as if he might have salvaged
something—maybe a lot—out of the night.
"Let's see how fast that bus really is," Arnie said, and they began to walk
across the parking lot toward the terminal, companionably close together.
Michael had formed an opinion of Christine on the ride out to the airport. He
was impressed with the job of restoration Arnie had done, but he disliked the
car itself disliked it intensely. He supposed it was ridiculous to hold such
feelings about an inanimate object, but the dislike was there all the same, big
and unmistakable, like a lump in the throat.
The source of the dislike was impossible to isolate. It had caused bitter
trouble in the family, and he supposed that was the real reason… but it wasn't
all. He hadn't liked the way Arnie
seemed
when he was behind the wheel:
somehow arrogant and petulant at the same time, like a weak king. The
impotent way he had railed about the insurance his use of that ugly and
striking word "shitters"… even the way the car had stalled when they
laughed together.
And it had a smell. You didn't notice it right away, but it was there. Not the
smell of new seat covers, that was quite pleasant; this was an undersmell,
bitter, almost (but not quite) secret. It was an old smell.
Well
, Michael told
himself,
the car is old, why in God's name do you expect it to smell new?
And that made undeniable sense. In spite of the really fantastic job Arnie had
done of restoring it, the Fury was twenty years old. That bitter, mouldy smell
might be coming from old carpeting in the boot, or old matting under the new
floormats; perhaps it was coming from the original padding under the bright
new seat covers. Just a smell of age.
And yet that undersmell, low and vaguely sickening, bothered him. It seemed
to come and go in waves, sometimes very noticeable, at other times
completely undetectable. It seemed to have no specific source. At its worst,
it smelled like the rotting corpse of some small animal—a cat, a woodchuck,
maybe a squirrel—that had gotten into the boot-or maybe crawled up into the
frame and then died there.
Michael was proud of what his son had accomplished… and very glad to get
out of his son's car.
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