the many things that baffled him when it came to women.
âWell, at camp, thereâs a schedule. No one can invite you to go anywhereâto a movie, or the mall, or even a McDonaldâs. So you sit on the bus together, or swim together, and you hold handsââshe blushed at this. Maybe he was wrong, maybe she had done more than he realized. âItâs not a date, and it ends when camp ends. He called me, once, but we didnât really have anything to talk about. I wrote him letters, and he never wrote back.â
âYeah, I see your point.â He didnât, not really, but he didnât have anything to contribute, so he wanted to move on. âLook, what would you do, if I just got up right now, paid the check, went out to my truck, and started driving?â
Again, she did not answer right away.
âElizabeth?â
âI guess Iâd ask the people if I could use their phone, make a collect call, and Iâd call my parents, tell them where I was.â
âDo you know where you are?â
âSort of. Not exactly. But the people here, they would tell me, right?â
He looked around. âLower your voice,â he said. âIâm serious.â
She flinched. It was amazing how easily he could control her. He liked it.
âIâd call my parents collect,â she whispered, âand then Iâd wait for them to come get me.â
âWhatâs my truck look like?â
âRed.â
âMake? Model?â
She needed a second to understand that question, then shook her head. âI havenât noticed.â
âLicense plate?â
âI havenât paid attention.â
She was a shitty liar. âElizabeth.â
She hung her head, whispered the plate numbers.
âLook,â he said, âI have to keep you with me.â
âI wouldnât tell,â she said. âIf thatâs what you need me to do, Iâll do it.â
âNo, you would tell. Because you think itâs the right thing, and I can see that youâre the kind of person who tries to do the right thing. Like me. The thing isâI didnât really do anything. Itâs just that, no oneâs going to believe that. This girl, she tried to get out of my truck while it was moving, she fell and hit her head.â
It sounded plausible to him, now that he had said it. It absolutely could have happened just as he said, and who would believe him? It was so unfair.
âBut no oneâs going to believe that, right?â He saw that Elizabeth didnât believe it. Her face was interesting that way. Some people would call her an open book, but Walter didnât think that expression was quite apt. An open book, glimpsed, was only words on a page, and you couldnât make out the whole story. Her face was likeâ¦fish in an aquarium, all her thoughts and feelings on display, but moving kind of lazily, not in a rush to get anywhere.
âI didnât mean any harm,â he tried, and this had the virtue of truth, or was at least more in the neighborhood of truth, but he could see she was still dubious. âIâve made some mistakes, but everyone makes mistakes. People just donât listen, you know? Girls. They donât listen. Theyâre in too much of a hurry, all the time.â
âWe read this book, Of Mice and Men, in seventh-grade G-and-T English,â she began.
âG and T?â
âOh, um, gifted and talented. But itâs my only G-and-T class.â She was embarrassed to be caught bragging. She hadnât realized she was bragging at first, but now she was owning up to it. That was important. âAnyway, thereâs a man in it, he doesnât mean any harm, but heâs really strong, and when his hand gets tangled inthis girlâs hair, heâs just trying to calm her down, but he breaks her neck.â
âAnd what happened to this guy?â
A long pause. âWell, he was
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