Donny didn't want to go there. Val stubbed out her dying cigarette, already wanting another. "There are these hinge moments in life, you know? I sit out here, and I think about them. Critical turning points where your life could have completely changed, one way or the other. You know?"
"Well, sure."
"You're thinking I'm going to bring up the scholarship again." Another smile opened up her face, this one bittersweet. "You won't even remember this, but—Lynn Gavel's party? For the yearbook staff, our senior year? We were right in the heat of our rival thing, and my ride, she had left without me, and you had your mom's car so you were going to give me a lift home? And it was getting late, and I knew you wanted to go, but I was being all pouty and…do you remember, I wandered off down to the pond at the end of her street, and you had to come looking for me?"
"I do."
"I wanted you to come after me. I went off on purpose—I even sent my ride home—so that you would have to leave the rest of them and come to me. I was a pout because I couldn't figure out how to get you interested. Interested enough to kiss me."
He started to say something else, then settled for, "No, I never knew."
"Of course you look at me now and you think, Thank God. But that's the thing. I would be different if I had wound up with you. So different. Not straitjacketed here. I always felt close to you, Donny. Like we had a connection. If only it weren't for that…that damn scholarship…"
She blotted her eyes with a knuckle, harshly. She watched him try to come up with something to say other than
"I'm scaring you off, huh?" Her words came out on a weird laugh.
"No, no," he said. "It's just that, I have to get out to see Pinty."
"Do you ever think about what your life would be like if I had won the scholarship? Your life in this town, what it would have been?"
He nodded, begrudging her nothing. "Every day since I came back."
"You'd have been a cop, right? Probably. And with you in there, maybe the Pail family wouldn't have taken over. Things might be a lot different. For everybody. Probably you would have married someone in town."
"Maybe."
"Maybe someone…like me."
"But you wouldn't have been here, right? You would have won the scholarship." He got to his feet as though afraid she would try to kiss him again. "You'd be long gone."
"That's right," she said. "Long gone."
She reached for another cigarette, knowing that, as soon as the door shut behind him, she would begin spinning their conversation around and around inside her head, her mind like a spider threading a web so elaborate, it could catch even imaginary prey.
42
BUCKY
THE CLASSICAL MUSIC record popped and crackled on the old hi-fi turntable. The album was one of a boxed set of six that Bucky's mother had ordered from the television soon after he was born. She bought it to play for him and Eddie in the afternoons, hoping it would somehow calm them down.
The records found their way back out of the cabinet after his mother died. Daddy played them at night to help him fall asleep in his chair. And if Eddie or Bucky ever turned it off, the man woke up in a rage. Daddy never slept in a bed again.
Now Daddy was gone and Eddie and Bucky had split up the albums, Bucky sticking Eddie with the faggy piano pieces and keeping the