“You haven’t come up my house.”
“No,” he said. “No, I—” What? How was he supposed to finish? “I been pretty busy,” he said lamely.
“Oh. Uh-huh.” He could have handled her being cool to him. What he couldn’t handle was the fear she was trying to hide. The fear of him. As if he was a dog that might bite her. Bobby had a crazy image of himself dropping down on all fours and starting to go
“I’m moving away.”
“Sully told me. But he didn’t know exactly where. I guess you guys don’t chum like you used to.”
“No,” Bobby said. “Not like we used to. But here.” He reached into his back pocket and brought out a piece of folded-over paper from a school notebook. Carol looked at it doubtfully, reached for it, then pulled her hand back.
“It’s just my address,” he said. “We’re going to Massachusetts. A town named Danvers.”
Bobby held out the folded paper but she still wasn’t taking it and he felt like crying. He remembered being at the top of the Ferris wheel with her and how it was like being at the top of the whole lighted world. He remembered a towel opening like wings, feet with tiny painted toes pivoting, and the smell of perfume. “She’s dancin to the drag, the cha-cha rag-a-mop,” Freddy Cannon sang from the radio in the other room, and it was Carol, it was Carol, it was Carol.
“I thought you might write,” he said. “I’ll probably be homesick, a new town and all.”
Carol took the paper at last and put it into the pocket of her shorts without looking at it.
“Sully says you’re different now.”
Bobby didn’t reply.
“
Bobby didn’t reply.
“Did you beat Harry Doolin up?” she asked, and gripped Bobby’s wrist with a cold hand. “Did you?”
Bobby slowly nodded his head.
Carol threw her arms around his neck and kissed him so hard their teeth clashed. Their mouths parted with an audible smack. Bobby didn’t kiss another girl on the mouth for three years . . . and never in his life did he have one kiss
“Good!” she said in a low fierce voice. It was almost a growl. “
Then she ran toward Broad Street, her legs—browned with summer and scabbed by many games and many sidewalks—flashing.
“Carol!” he called after her. “Carol, wait!”
She ran.
“Carol, I love you!”
She stopped at that . . . or maybe it was just that she’d reached Commonwealth Avenue and had to look for traffic. In any case she paused a moment, head lowered, and then looked back. Her eyes were wide and her lips were parted.
“Carol!”
“I have to go home, I have to make the salad,” she said, and ran away from him. She ran across the street and out of his life without looking back a second time. Perhaps that was just as well.
He and his mom moved to Danvers. Bobby went to Danvers Ele-mentary, made some friends, made even more enemies. The fights started, and not long after, so did the truancies. On the Commentssection of his first report card, Mrs. Rivers wrote: “
Mrs. Garfield went, and Mrs. Garfield helped as much as she could, but there were too many things about which she could not speak: Providence, a certain lost-pet poster, and how she’d come by the money she’d used to buy into a new business and a new life. The two women agreed that Bobby was suffering from growing pains; that he was missing his old town and old friends as well. He would eventually outlast his troubles. He was too bright and too full of potential not to.
Liz prospered in her new career as a real-estate agent. Bobby did well enough in English (he got an A-plus on a paper in which he com-pared Steinbeck’s
Carol
As he opened each of her letters and pulled it out Bobby would think,
But he would not help her to do so. After each of her letters came he would sit down and write a response. He told her about the house in Brookline his mother sold for twenty-five thousand dollars—six months’ salary at her old job in a single commission. He told her about the A-plus on his English theme. He told her about his friend Morrie, who was teaching him to play chess. He didn’t tell her that sometimes he and Morrie went on window-breaking expeditions, riding their bikes (Bobby had finally saved up enough to buy one) as fast as they could past the scuzzy
