Going All the Way

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Going All the Way Page 13

by Dan Wakefield


  “Oh,” Marty said, obviously unimpressed. Sonny felt embarrassed in Gunner’s behalf, something he would never have imagined could happen. Marty yawned and said, “Well, thanks for the coffee. I have to run.”

  She slid from the booth, a set of keys jangling in her hand, and started off.

  “Wait!” Gunner almost pushed Sonny onto the floor as he scrambled out of the booth. Marty turned and looked at him with her eyebrows slightly raised, questioning, as if she couldn’t imagine what in the world Gunner might have to say to her. Sonny thought she looked exotically arrogant.

  “Well,” Gunner said and cleared his throat. “Why don’t we, uh, get together sometime? I mean, you know, I’d like to talk to you again. There’s some stuff I’d like to talk to you about.”

  “Oh?”

  She damn well wasn’t making it easy. Sonny felt downright sorry for Gunner.

  “Do you have a phone?”

  “My father does. It’s in the book.”

  She turned again, twitching off in that teasing walk. Gunner stood watching, in a kind of trance.

  “Some girl,” Sonny said.

  “It won’t be easy,” Gunner said, mostly to himself. Then, as if snapping awake, he looked wildly at Sonny and said, “Holy shit! What’s her father’s name?”

  “She didn’t say.”

  “Come on!”

  Gunner dug in his pocket, pulled out an assortment of coins, and flung them all on the table. He ran out the door and looked desperately up and down the street. Then he started running and Sonny trotted behind, wanting to help. A new Chevy convertible was pulling out into traffic, and Gunner spotted Marty at the wheel, ran out in the street dodging a truck, and caught up to the convertible just as it halted for a stoplight on the corner.

  “Hey!” he yelled.

  She turned her big dark sunglasses on him.

  “What’s his name? Your father?”

  “Solomon,” she said, and with just one corner of her thin lips curling almost imperceptibly upward she added, “As in the Old Testament.”

  The light greened, and she gunned off with tires screeching, leaving Gunner in a gassy cloud. He turned and trotted back to the sidewalk, noticeably limping. Sonny figured he must have twisted an ankle dodging the truck in his rush to Marty’s car.

  “What’s wrong? You hurt your ankle or something?”

  “Hell, no,” Gunner said quietly, sweat beads showing on his brow, “I’ve got such a goddam hard-on I can barely walk.”

  2

  Sonny walked around the block with Gunner—slowly, of course, like you’d walk with a guy who was just getting over a leg injury. Gunner kept slamming his fist into the palm of his other hand and saying, “Son of a bitch.” Sonny suggested they might have a nice cool brew somewhere, but Gunner didn’t feel like sitting still. He was nervous as a cat. He lit a cigarette and threw it into somebody’s yard after just a couple puffs.

  “C’mon,” he said, “let’s roll out to Little America and bash a few balls.”

  Gunner didn’t say a word on the way. Sonny was thinking it was sort of funny—not funny ha-ha, but funny strange—how their good intention to get some real first-hand culture turned out. It seemed like everything led to pussy, even Art. He didn’t mention that to Gunner, though.

  Sonny looked on and chain-smoked while his buddy took things out on an innocent bucket of golf balls.

  “She thinks I’m a stupid jock,” Gunner kept saying, and then he’d wind up and knock another ball to hell and gone.

  “No, she doesn’t,” Sonny would answer, but it didn’t sound very convincing, probably because he wasn’t really convinced of it. Besides, he felt silly, trying to reassure one of the town’s great cocksman about a broad!

  Gunner was sweaty after just one bucket, and he said what the hell, they might as well go tip a few. They went into Broad Ripple to the Melody Inn, which had the virtue of being the closest place to get a beer. It was getting on toward five and there were some businessmen already gathered—not big businessmen, but guys who probably sold roofing or air-conditioners or some other door-to-door kind of thing. Sonny figured that must be a real bitch of a way to make a living. It wasn’t bad for college guys on summer vacations, but these were guys with thinning hair and spreading waistlines, guys with slack, puffy faces who wore wingtip shoes with ventilation holes and white-silk socks with arrows up the side. A couple of them had broads along, probably gals they picked up in an office, the kind with those big, shellacked hairdos and double chins and laughter that was loud without being happy.

  “Order me a Bud,” Gunner said suddenly and headed for the back of the bar. Sonny figured he was going to the head. Maybe he even had to puke, poor bastard. His face had a faint green tinge to it. Sonny ordered Buds when the waitress came, and they were there when Gunner got back to the table. He looked in a little better shape, and when he sat down he said with relief, “It’s there. It’s in there.”

  “What is?”

  “Her phone number.”

  “In the head?”

  Gunner looked plenty pissed off. “Hell no, it’s not in the head, it’s in the phone book! Under her father’s name. What the hell kind of girl you think she is? The kind that guys write her phone number in the head in a crummy bar?”

  “Jesus, no, man. I’m sorry. I didn’t get what you were talking about. No shit. I thought you went to the head.”

  That was a terrible thing to say about a girl, that her phone number was written in the crapper. You often saw girls’ phone numbers written on the wall of a head, especially in bars, but they were numbers of whory broads that a guy would write down for general consumption, with an explanatory comment under the number like “Stella Wants to Fuck” or “Connie Eats Cock,” something like that. Sometimes Sonny wondered if they were real girls’ phone numbers and if the girls really did the stuff it said on the wall. Once when he was pretty loaded he took down one of those numbers, but he threw it away when he found it in his billfold a couple weeks later, written on the back of an old university ID card. The truth was that if he ever called a number like that and some sexy babe answered the phone and said to come on over, he’d be scared shitless, so there wasn’t really much point in calling. The number might be phony, or it might not, and either thing would end up depressing him.

  “Listen,” Gunner said, “I’ve got to convince her I’m not a dumb jock.”

  “Oh—right.”

  Sonny had got so wrapped up in his own imagined troubles he’d forgot about his buddy’s real problem. “Why don’t you tell her about Japan?” he suggested. “The stuff about Zen.”

  Gunner stroked his chin. “Maybe,” he said.

  He brooded over another round of beers, and Sonny reminded him they probably ought to get home for dinner. Gunner drove him back without saying anything and almost passed the house.

  “Well,” Sonny said when he got out, “good luck, man. Lemme know what happens.”

  “Right,” Gunner said, sounding a million miles away.

  Sonny walked slowly to the house, his thoughts sunk deep in his friend’s dilemma. He wondered if Gunner had ever failed before and whether the Jewish girl really didn’t like him or was just putting on an act. Maybe she didn’t like him because he wasn’t Jewish. Sonny knew a lot of the Jewish people felt that way, and at first it had surprised him; he had figured a Jewish person would be flattered that a regular person would be hot for them, and then he realized that was prejudice on his part and he felt lousy for thinking it. He walked in the front door wondering if maybe Gunner could argue with the girl that she was discriminating against him if she didn’t fuck him. There was more than one kind of discrimination, after all, and surely one was as bad as another. His head was filled with those vital questions as he wandered into the living room, and he didn’t even notice anyone until his mother’s voice broke his concentration.

  “Sonny, I want you to meet a wonderful man.”

  A big, craggy-faced fellow was sitting across
the room, and he stood up and came toward Sonny. He was one of those carved-out-of-mountain sort of guys, with iron-gray hair and a jaw that could stop a crowbar.

  “Hello, sir,” Sonny said.

  The man took his hand with a grip that would have turned an orange to instant juice. “Happy to meet you, son. I’m Luke Matthews.”

  The name sounded familiar, but Sonny couldn’t quite place it. Maybe he was some famous guy.

  “Mr. Matthews wrote a book,” his mother said.

  “Oh. You’re a writer?”

  “I wouldn’t say the literary art is my true vocation,” Matthews said with a craggy smile. He had a couple of bright gold teeth.

  “Well,” Mrs. Burns said quickly, blocking further questions, “maybe you’d like a cold beer, Sonny? There’s some beer cold in the icebox.”

  Sonny looked at her very hard and she coughed and looked away. He figured something was up. His mother putting cold beer in the icebox was a sure tip-off. He went to the kitchen and opened the refrigerator door, cautiously. Sure enough, there among the cakes and pies and brownies was a six-pack of Weidemann’s. It wasn’t his favorite, but it sure as hell was beer.

  “I think Mr. Matthews would like one, too,” his mother called in cheerily.

  The plot thickened.

  Sonny punched open two cans with the churchkey and, because there was company, poured them into glasses. After he gave Luke Matthews his beer and sat down, he stared at the guy and asked, “What was the book you wrote?”

  “I’ll just leave you two alone for a while,” his mother said. “I have some errands to run.”

  She scurried out of the house, and Sonny looked back at Luke, waiting for a reply.

  “My book is entitled And the Heavens Answered.”

  “Oh,” Sonny said, “I get it.”

  He should have known. The beer had thrown him off, but you couldn’t tell about the new religious guys, some of them smoked and drank just to show they were One of the Boys. They were the kind who told you that Jesus was a regular guy, a real sport.

  “Give it a chance, boy,” Matthews said. “Give it a fair chance.”

  Luke stood up and plucked a book from the coffee table beside him and handed it to Sonny.

  “I don’t even ask you read it all,” he said, “although many have found some interest in its pages. I merely ask that you note from the jacket what it is really about, rather than make your own prejudgments.”

  The cover had the title and showed a man in a prison outfit kneeling in the prayer position, with the sky opening up to throw down the heavenly spotlight on him.

  On the back was a picture of Luke at his craggiest, and an explanatory blurb:

  Luke Matthews is the pseudonym of a hardened convict whose evil deeds as a young man struck terror into the hearts of many citizens and communities in the area where he was reared, somewhere west of the Mississippi River. At nineteen he was sentenced to forty years in federal prison on a variety of counts, and was judged untreatable by prison psychologists, a hard-core case of criminal personality. However, at the age of twenty-four, while working on the rockpile, he experienced a personal religious revelation that sent him for days into a coma during which the only words he muttered, over and over, were “Luke—3:24.” Witnesses claim that Matthews had never read a Bible in his life and was totally unfamiliar with the scriptures. Yet, when he recovered and asked for a New Testament, and saw the message, he knew that God had spoken to him, and he gained an inner calm and strength that changed his entire personality. He became assistant to the prison truck gardener and developed a new breed of hardy carrot that can be grown even in the soil of the desert. At age thirty-nine, after twenty years in prison, he was released on good conduct. Despite his flair for horticulture, Matthews felt that he was called to a vocation of spiritual guidance, not limited to any denomination. He founded and organized the movement known as “Retreats Away in the Woods” (popularly known as “RAW”), which has become a source of inspiration and healing for growing thousands. On leaving prison, Matthews shed his old name with his old life, and has since walked in the steps of his Master, under the new name by which he has counseled and inspired so many—Luke Matthews. This book is the story of his life and quest.

  Sonny took a couple of swigs from his beer. “I read what it was about,” he said.

  “So you see, son, I am not exactly naïve about the ways of the world.”

  “I guess not,” Sonny said.

  “So then, perhaps I can be of some service to you. As a friend. A man who has experienced much and found the Light after years of darkness.”

  Sonny took a deep breath. “Mr. Matthews,” he said, trying to keep his voice steady, “I’m afraid there’s been a misunderstanding.”

  “What’s that?”

  “My mother.”

  “Your mother understands that you are troubled, and she wishes to help you.”

  “My mother does not understand that I am sick of hearing about God. I don’t believe in Him. I don’t even like Him.”

  “Well.” Luke chuckled. “You can’t dislike something—or someone—who doesn’t exist. Now can you?”

  Sonny closed his eyes. “Mr. Matthews, I have to work things out for myself.”

  “Every man does, son. Every man does. But a man can be helped by his friends. Conversely, he can be led into harmful pathways by his friends, if he does not choose them carefully. Sometimes the most magnetic people, people of great personal charm and influence, do not use that gift for good works. They may not be evil in themselves, yet they may walk in evil ways and lead others with them on the downward path.”

  Sonny began to see Mr. Matthews’ mission more clearly. He had evidently been commissioned by Mrs. Burns to “save” her precious little boy from the evil influence of Gunner Casselman. Sonny tried to keep calm. He counted to twenty-five.

  “Sir, I’m afraid my mother doesn’t understand about my friends either,” Sonny said with slow, precise emphasis. “I am afraid she will let me have to choose my own friends. I’m—I am no longer a little boy.”

  He hadn’t quite been able to bring himself to say, “I am a man,” for fear it might not sound convincing.

  “You are at a turning point,” Luke Matthews said gently.

  “Well then, I’ll make the goddam turn myself!” Sonny shouted.

  “I know how you feel, son.”

  “You do? That’s fine! Because I have just one favor to ask you.”

  “Anything that’s in my power, son.”

  Sonny stood up. “Leave me alone. Leave me the fuck alone.”

  Matthews folded his big hands together, cracking the knuckles like a volley of shots. “I will respect your wishes,” he said. “However, if you change your mind, if you wish to discuss with me any matter at all, I will be at your service as long as I am here.”

  “Here?” Sonny asked. “You mean here in town?”

  Matthews cleared his throat. “To be more specific, here in this lovely home, where your mother has so generously extended me your family’s hospitality.”

  Purple spots began to float before Sonny’s eyes like bright balloons. He turned without saying anything and went upstairs to his room. There was a battered little black valise with the initials “L.M.” printed in gold, lying at the foot of the bottom bunk bed. Fresh towels and a washcloth were laid out neatly beside it. The purple balloons drifted out of Sonny’s sight, and his whole mind focused on a single stark fact.

  He was rooming with Luke Matthews.

  Sonny marched out of the house without even saying a word to his new roomie. He walked down to 59th Street and headed west, toward College Avenue. There was a Standard station there, with a phone booth. He was so mad he didn’t even want to use the telephone at home. That probably didn’t make sense, but somehow it matched the way he felt. He didn’t want to have anything to do with the goddam place. They ought to hang a goddam cross on the door and turn it into a mission. That’s almost what it was anyway.

/>   He walked with a very determined pace along 59th Street, noting to himself that he was obeying the traffic law that said, “Where there are no sidewalks, walk on the left-hand side of the street, facing traffic.” Back in grade school you had to memorize the traffic laws, and Sergeant Hackenthorpe of the city police force came around to talk to the kids in the auditorium and told them all the horrible stuff that happened to you if you didn’t obey the traffic laws. The main thing Sonny remembered about the talk was Sergeant Hackenthorpe telling in a very sad voice about a kid who ran out into the street after his ball without looking both ways, and was hit by a car and killed. The boys had to try like mad to keep from laughing, and Richard Armitage got to giggling so hard that some snot came out of his nose and then everybody on his row cracked up and the principal had to quiet them down. What broke the guys up was the part about the kid running into the street after “his ball,” which they took to mean his testicle. The boys were just learning the words that had sex meanings as well as clean meanings and they went into fits when anyone said those kind of words you could take in a dirty way. But maybe Sonny figured, the whole uproar over the “ball” part of the story was what made him remember it, and made him remember the traffic laws. A person’s mind was really weird. Sonny found himself picturing one of his balls dropping off and rolling into the street and him running after it and getting hit by a car. Jesus, he was really in a stew.

  By the time he walked the mile or so to the Standard station he was soaked with sweat, and he could feel his heart thumping like crazy. Sometimes when he got mad he thought he might be having a heart attack. Maybe that’s how he would die—of having a heart attack. It might not be so bad. It would sure as hell be better than having one of your balls drop off and roll out into the street, and then having a car hit you when you ran out to retrieve your ball. Sonny stepped into the phone booth and reached in his pocket for a dime to make a call, and while he was fishing around he just sort of checked on his balls to make sure they were safe inside there. His balls seemed to be O.K., but he only had a quarter and a nickel and some pennies. He walked up to the station and went inside, where a couple of grease-smeared guys in coveralls were horsing around. He hated to just ask them for change, which he thought might piss them off since he wasn’t buying anything, so he put his quarter in the Coke machine and got a bottle of Coke and a dime and a nickel back. He gulped down about half of the Coke, which was warm and acidy tasting, and went back out to the phone booth. He called up Gunner, but his mother answered and said he wasn’t home. She sounded very snippy about it, and Sonny just thanked her and hung up. He still had two nickels left, and he put them in the phone and dialed Buddie Porter’s number.

 

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