her fixed up as good as new. I don't give a shit about college. And if you
don't get off my case, I'll drop out of high school. That ought to shut you up if
I deserve… your your cruelty… but I'll fight this self-destructive streak of
yours with everything I have. So don't you talk about dropping out of school."
"But I'll really do it," he answered. "I don't want you to even kid yourself into
thinking I won't. I'll be eighteen in February, and I'll do it on my own then if
you don't stay out of this from now on. Do you understand me?"
"Go to bed," she said tearfully. "Go to bed, you're breaking my heart."
"Am I?" Shockingly, he laughed, "Hurts, doesn't it? I know."
He left then, walking slowly, the limp pulling his body slightly to the left.
Shortly she heard the heavy, tired clump of his shoes on the stairs—also a
sound terribly reminiscent of her childhood, when she had thought to herself,
The ogre's going to bed
.
She burst into a fresh spasm of weeping, got up clumsily, and went out the
back door to do her crying in private. She held herself—thin comfort, but
better than none—and looked up at a horned moon that was quadrupled
through the film of her tears. Everything had changed, and it had happened
with the speed of a cyclone. Her son hated her; she had seen it in his face—it
wasn't a tantrum, a temporary pique, a passing squall of adolescence. He
hated
her, and this wasn't the way it was supposed to go with her good boy,
not at all.
Not at
all
.
She stood on the stoop and cried until the tears began to run their course and
the sobs became occasional hatchings and gasps. The cold gnawed her bare
ankles above her mules and bit more bluntly through her housecoat. She went
inside and upstairs. She stood outside Arnie's room indecisively for almost a
minute before going in.
He had fallen asleep on the coverlet of his bed. His pants were still on. He
seemed more unconscious than asleep, and his face looked horribly old. A
trick of the light, coming from the hall and falling into the room from over her
shoulder, made it seem for a moment to her that his hair was thinning, that his
sleep-gaping mouth was without teeth. A small squeal of horror strained
itself through the hand clapped to her mouth and she hurried toward him.
Her shadow, which had been on the bed, moved with her and she saw it was
only Arnie, the impression of age no more than the light and her own
exhausted confusion,
She looked at his clock-radio and saw that it was set for 4:30 A.M. She
thought of turning the alarm off; she even stretched her hand out to do it.
Ultimately she found she couldn't.
Instead she went down to her bedroom, sat down at the phone table, and
picked up the handset. She held it for a moment, debating. If she called Mike
in the middle of the night, he would think that
That something terrible had happened?
She giggled. Well,
hadn't
it? It surely had. And it was still happening.
She dialed the number of the Ramada Inn in Kansas City where her husband
was staying, vaguely aware that she was, for the first time since she had left
the grim and grimy three-story house in Rocksburg for college twenty-seven
years before, calling for help.