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door.

I looked back to her place.  My hands were sweating on the steering

wheel.  I saw her father framed in the window.  He had just come

through the doorway and was standing there in perfect profile, staring

down at the damage, at all the broken glass I imagined winking up at

him from the floor.

He turned slowly toward the window and looked out.  He looked to the

right and then to the left, and then he looked at me.

I had to turn away.

*

There was too much sadness there, too much guilt in me.

I heard another crash.  Louder than before.  She had put the second

rock through the right front window of the house next door.

I didn't ask myself why.  I knew why.  There would be questions now,

plenty of them.  Her father would be answering some of them.

There was shouting inside.  A woman.  A man.  Casey was straightening

up, recovering the follow-through.  A slab of glass came drifting down

off the top sill like the blade of a guillotine, hit the

bottom sill and shattered.  The shouting sounded almost hysterical

tome.

I watched her walk back to the car.  She took her time.

There was a moment when I almost left her there  I glanced back to her

place and saw that her father was gone from the window.  The porch

lights went on.  Soon he would be standing there.  I leaned out to

her.

"Get in, goddamn you!"

Sympathy can turn so quickly.  Just add fear.  Stir.

By the time she was back in the car I was burning.  Burning and scared.

I had just enough control left not to gun the thing to get away from

there.  We slid away from the curb nice and slowly.

See no evil, hear no evil.

I wondered if anybody was buying it but me.

I wanted to hit her.

I wanted to slap her so bad my shoulders twitched.  I wouldn't even

look at her.  I kept thinking how she'd involved me, how she'd done

this to me.  Not just to the people next door or to her parents for

whatever idiot reason, but to me.  I hadn't done anything.  I hadn't

asked for it.  ,_, ..p

All kinds of things went through my head.  I felt like opening the door

on her side and giving her a push.  Never mind that the car was moving.

Fuck her.  If she could do that to me.  Just fuck her.

I drove two blocks under the most careful, most frantic control of my

life, absolutely boiling inside, and then hit it hard and went looking

for the highway.

I hit sixty on the quiet streets of Dead River and pushed it up to

seventy-five on the coast road.  The road was not nearly good enough

for seventy-five.  Neither was the pickup.  I realized what I was doing

and pulled over.

I cut back the engine, cut the lights.  We sat there in the deep black

of emptynighton the shoulder of a bad road with noonearound but the

crickets and the frogs, and I had not lost an ounce of my delicious

anger.  I held out as long as I could, hoping she'd say something to

make it all right again, knowing in my heart that there

was nothing she could say, not now.  And then I groped for where I

knew her shirt would be and pulled her over with both my hands and

shook her like a rag doll, bounced her against the car seat while she

whimpered to me to please stop and I told her to go to hell and felt

the shirt tear along the sides of my big, happy fists.

"You don't understand!"

She was crying again but this time I didn't care.  It didn't mean a

thing.  She couldn't touch me.  I shook her until I felt the shirt go

at the shoulder too and then that was no good to me so I slid my hand

into her hair and shook her that way.

"You sonovabitch!  You don't understand!"

Then suddenly I had a tearstained screeching little bomb on my hands.

I've told you she was all muscle.

Well, we came close to taking out the front seat in that pickup of

mine.

I could barely see her and she could barely see me, so there was a lot

of inadvertent pain for both of us.  One of us broke the rearview

mirror.  Somebody put a dent in the radio as big as an apple.

When it finally wore down for us the palms of my hands were wet with

her tears and the musty smell of them filled the car as she sobbed into

my shoulder, great mangled racking sounds that tore what was left of my

anger to shreds and left me holding her, stroking her, wondering how in

the hell it had come to this, anyway.

"Just hold on to me, huh?"

Her voice was very small against me.  She sniffled, laughed a little.

"I... I think I've got a screw loose somewhere, you know?  So please

just... hold on?"

I did hold her.

And then a little later I heard her sigh.

"God, I'm fucked up!"

"You want to tell me about it?"

She laughed again.  It was weighted with sadness.

"No."

"Tell me anyhow."

For a moment she was very still.  My hand found the warm bare flesh of

her shoulder where I'd torn the shirt.  Her breathing was calmer and

more even now.

"He hasn't done anything fora longtime now.  I'd almost forgiven him.

Both of us."

She paused, thought a moment.  Her voice turned colder.

"No, I hadn't.  That's a lie."

"Who?  Who are we talking about?"

"My father."

She turned her head away from me slightly so that it rested just below

my shoulder and stared out through the windshield.  Clouds had parted

for the moon again just moments before and now I saw snail tracks of

tears across her cheeks, bathed in cool white light, dissolving the tan

into something pale and famished-looking.

"He drinks.  A lot.  You're not supposed to do that when you're

vice-president of a bank.  So he drinks at home where there's nobody

there but us to see.

"My mother would go out.  Clubs and meetings and all that, the kind of

thing that's expected of a wife in ... her position.  Because he

couldn't manage his end of it.  Get him around liquor, and he's drunk.

So he stayed in.  With us, me and Jimmie, my little brother.  Maybe she

just wanted to get away from him.  I don't know.

"He's not a bad man.  He's not mean.  Even when he's drunk, he's not

mean.  Just weak, and foolish.  She's very smart.  Intolerant, and

disappointed, I guess.  They should never have married at all.  But

where she comes from, you get married.  You just do."

She glanced at me once and then looked away, shaking her head.

"I'm not doing so good at this."

"Go on."

"When I was thirteen ... I guess you could say he raped me."

I waited.  I could feel something clog my throat.  I think I'd half

expected it.  I felt the sudden press of the inevitable.  Itwasas

though the car sat underneath a bell jar and we were in a perfect

vacuum, with everything extraneous sucked out of it and us except this

one moment in time, this one event.

Figure this if you can:

It was then that she seduced me utterly.

I waited.  I don't think I so much as blinked.  Perhaps a car went by,

playing over us with its headlights.  I know I saw her very clearly.

"I was in the tub.  I still liked baths then.  "We were never very big