playing madly away at a song no one could recognize.

Except David Caroni.

He walked to the kitchen, through the dining room, drawn by the sound of the broken music. The French doors had been thrown open. His mother, her hair hidden in the white cap she wore when she charged into her spring housecleaning, an event that shook up the entire routine of the Caroni household for at least a month, was dusting the keyboard with a white cloth. David stood transfixed, surprised but somewhat pleased that his mother was the medium through which he would receive the message. He had been waiting for so long. For the sign, the signal, the command, the order. Knowing that it must come and trying to be patient. And now it was here.

He listened, silent, still. His mother, unaware of his presence, continued to produce the discordant music that was telling David what he must do.

David listened, smiling. Listened to what he must do and how he must do it and when it must be done.

At last.

Bunting caught up to Archie at his locker, timing it beautifully, waiting until most everyone else had left the vicinity.

'Hi, Archie,' Bunting said, a bit breathless and not sure why.

'What do you say, Bunting?' Archie was arranging his textbooks on the shelf of the locker. Bunting realized that he had never seen Archie Costello carrying books out of the building. Didn't Archie ever do homework?

In Archie's presence, he abandoned all his preconceived notions and the conversation he had been rehearsing in his mind.

'Know what gets me, Archie?' he asked instead, going in a direction he hadn't intended.

'What gets you, Bunting?'

'If I didn't come to find you, you'd never come to find me.'

'That's right, Bunting.' Archie continued to shuffle his books around on the shelf.

'Suppose I stopped coming around?'

'Then you'd just stop coming around.'

Bunting wanted to say: Look at me, will you? Instead: 'Wouldn't you want to find out why?'

'Not particularly. It's a free country, Bunting. You can come and go as you please.' Archie had opened a book, looked through the pages, speaking absently as if his mind were on more important matters.

Dismayed, Bunting said: 'But I thought—' And paused, wondering how he could say what he wanted to say delicately, diplomatically.

'Thought what?'

'I thought, you know, next year. .' And let the sentence dribble away. Archie sometimes made him feel like he was still in the fourth grade, for crissakes.

'Next year?'

Bunting knew that Archie was making him spell it out. He knew he should just walk away, tell Archie Screw you and split. But knew he couldn't There was too much at stake.

'Yes, next year. Making me, like, the Assigner. You know. After you graduate.'

Archie replaced the first book on the locker shelf and took down another. A math book, spanking new, it looked as if it had never been opened.

'You are going to be the Assigner, Bunting.'

'What did you say?' Bunting asked, blinking.

'I said, Bunting, that you are going to be the Assigner next year.'

'Oh.' He had a desire to leap and shout, go bounding down the corridor, but maintained his cool. Let the 'oh' echo. Had to play it smart. The way Archie always played it. 'Don't the Vigils have to vote on it or something?' Bunting said, knowing he had blundered as soon as the words were out of his mouth. Asking that question was definitely not playing it cool.

Archie looked at him for the first time, a pained expression on his face.

'Don't you take my word for it, Bunting?'

'Sure, sure,' Bunting said hurriedly. 'I just thought—'

'There you go, thinking again, Bunting,' Archie said, turning back to the locker, taking down another textbook, looking at it as if he'd never seen it before. 'There's one condition, however.'

'Name it,' Bunting said.

'You'll need an assistant A strong right arm, right?'

'Right,' Bunting snapped.

'I know you've got your stooges. Cornacchio and Harley. Keep them around, if you want. But your right arm will be Janza. Emile Janza. .'

'Janza?' Trying not to betray his dismay. Dismay? Hell, disgust. Complete disgust.

'Emile will serve you well. He's an animal, but animals come in handy if they're trained right.'

'Right,' Bunting said, but thinking: When you're gone, Archie, I'll be boss and I'll choose my own right arms.

'Bunting,' Archie said, looking up again, looking at him with those cool blue appraising eyes. 'I'll be telling Emile about it. Emile Janza will be looking forward to his job as your assistant. And Emile doesn't like to be disappointed. He's very unpredictable and gets very physical when he's disappointed. Never disappoint Emile Janza, Bunting.'

'I won't,' Bunting said, trying to swallow and finding it difficult, his throat dry and parched.

'Good,' Archie said, studying the book in his hand, turned away from Bunting now.

Bunting stood there, not knowing what else to say. Wanting to ask a million questions about the duties of the Assigner, but not quite sure how to proceed. And afraid to ask another dumb question.

Archie looked up, surprised. 'You still here, Bunting?'

'Oh, no,' he said, which was stupid. 'I'm leaving. I'm just leaving. . '

Archie smiled, a smile as cold as frost on a winter window. 'We'll go into details later, Bunting. Okay?'

'Sure,' Bunting said, 'sure, Archie.'

And got out of there as fast as he could, not wanting to risk screwing up the biggest thing — despite Emile Janza — that had ever happened in his life.

Later, leaving school, without any books in his arms, of' course, Archie paused to drink in the spring air. He spotted Obie walking across the campus in his usual hurried stride, as if hounded by pursuers. Poor Obie, always worried.

Obie saw him and waved, waited for Archie to catch up to him at the entrance to the parking lot.

'What's up, Archie?' Obie said, the mechanical greeting that really asked nothing.

But Archie chose to answer. 'I've just spent a few minutes guaranteeing the ruin of Trinity next year,' he said.

And said no more.

'Are you going to explain what you said or just let it hang there?' Obie asked, trying to mask his impatience and not doing a very god job.

'I just told Bunting that he will be the Assigner next year,' Archie said, 'and that Emile Janza will be his right-hand man.'

'Boy, Archie, you really hate this school, don't you? And everybody in it.'

Archie registered surprise. 'I don't hate anything or anybody, Obie.'

Obie sensed the sincerity of Archie's reply. The moment seemed suspended, breathless, as they walked toward their cars. Obie wanted to ask: Do you love anything, then, or anybody? Or is it that you just don't have any feelings at all?

He knew he would never find out.

Carter saw his chance: Archie parking his car in the driveway at his house, stepping out of the car, pausing as if testing the atmosphere, his thin body knifelike and lethal silhouetted against the rays of a spotlight above the garage door.

The pause propelled Carter into action. Otherwise he might have hesitated, and then Archie — and the moment — would be gone.

'Archie,' he called, walking toward him.

Archie turned, saw him, waited, his head haloed by the spotlight.

Вы читаете Beyond the Chocolate War
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