too.â
I thought of old manâs shrill handful-of-glass voice, the snap of his truss. No, he hadnât been dead, and I had traded the smell of piss in his old Dodge for something a lot worse.
âAnyway, man, we donât have time to talk about all that. Five more miles and weâll start seeing houses again. Seven more and weâre at the Lewiston city line. Which means you have to decide now.â
âDecide what?â Only I thought I knew.
âWho rides the Bullet and who stays on the ground. You or your mother.â He turned and looked at me with his drowning moonlight eyes. He smiled more fully and I saw most of his teeth were gone, knocked out in the crash. He patted the steering wheel. âIâm taking one of you with me, man. And since youâre here, you get to choose. What do you say?â
You canât be serious rose to my lips, but what would be the point of saying that, or anything like it? Of course he was serious. Dead serious.
I thought of all the years she and I had spent together, Alan and Jean Parker against the world. A lot of good times and more than a few really bad ones. Patches on my pants and casserole suppers. Most of the other kids took a quarter a week to buy the hot lunch; I always got a peanut-butter sandwich or a piece of bologna rolled up in day-old bread, like a kid in one of those dopey rags-to-riches stories. Her working in God knew how many different restaurants and cocktail lounges to support us. The time she took the day off work to talk to the ADC man, her dressed in her best pants suit, him sitting in our kitchen rocker in a suit of his own, one even a nine-year-old kid like me could tell was a lot better than hers, with a clipboard in his lap and a fat, shiny pen in his fingers. Her answering the insulting, embarrassing questions he asked with a fixed smile on her mouth, even offering him more coffee, because if he turned in the right report sheâd get an extra fifty dollars a month, a lousy fifty bucks. Lying on her bed after heâd gone, crying, and when I came in to sit beside her she had tried to smile and said ADC didnât stand for Aid to Dependent Children but Awful Damn Crapheads. I had laughed and then she laughed, too, because you had to laugh, weâd found that out. When it was just you and yourfat chain-smoking ma against the world, laughing was quite often the only way you could get through without going insane and beating your fists on the walls. But there was more to it than that, you know. For people like us, little people who went scurrying through the world like mice in a cartoon, sometimes laughing at the assholes was the only revenge you could ever get. Her working all those jobs and taking the overtime and taping her ankles when they swelled and putting her tips away in a jar marked ALANâS COLLEGE FUND âjust like one of those dopey rags-to-riches stories, yeah, yeahâand telling me again and again that I had to work hard, other kids could maybe afford to play Freddy Fuckaround at school but I couldnât because she could put away her tips until doomsday cracked and there still wouldnât be enough; in the end it was going to come down to scholarships and loans if I was going to go to college and I had to go to college because it was the only way out for me . . . and for her. So I had worked hard, you want to believe I did, because I wasnât blindâI saw how heavy she was, I saw how much she smoked (it was her only private pleasure . . . her only vice, if youâre one of those who must take that view), and I knew that some day our positions would reverse and Iâd be the one taking care of her. With a college education and a good job, maybe I could do that. I wanted to do that. I loved her. She had a fierce temper and an ugly mouth on herâthat day we waited for the Bullet and then I chickened out wasnât the only time she ever yelled at me and