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The Best Man

Page 10

by Richard Peck


  “Because Mr. McLeod’s a keeper, right?”

  “If your uncle doesn’t mess up. He looks like a keeper from where I stand.”

  “Do you think they’re alike?”

  “Do you think your mom and me are alike?”

  “Yikes, no way, Dad.”

  “I think they’re a fit,” he said. “But Paul has this big image—the cars, the clothes, the job, the whole package—and he kind of hides out behind it.”

  “So are we going to talk it over with him? Knock some sense into him?”

  “No, we’re guys,” Dad said. “We’ll talk about the Cubs, and cars.”

  “That’ll help?”

  “You work with what you’ve got. But we’ll make sure he sees there’s a place for Ed McLeod in our family. We’ll keep an eye out for whatever we can do. It’ll take the time it takes. It’ll work or it won’t work.”

  Now Dad was up in a crouch, and into the water. I followed. We raced, and he let me win. He’d always let me win, but now I noticed.

  We sat through the afternoon, drinking canned diet tea out of the ice chest. The four of us dangled our legs off the pier: six hairy legs with big calves, plus two pale matchsticks. We talked about the Cubs and cars as the sun slid behind the trees, taking down summer.

  Mr. McLeod mentioned to Dad that there were three things wrong with his Kia. Ignition and a couple of other things. Clogged fuel line. Dad said he’d have a look and put his clothes on. Mr. McLeod pulled on a T-shirt, and they went up the path to the cars.

  That left me with Uncle Paul down on the pier. He doesn’t know anything about what goes on under a car hood, probably because he trades them in before the first oil change. It was evening around us, but still afternoon across the lake. East. The sun was setting in their windows over there.

  I looked around in my head for a good way to start. Then I thought of something. “Did Mr. McLeod ever fix you any of his stinging nettle soup?”

  “His what?” Uncle Paul said.

  “He can make soup out of stinging nettles.”

  “Not for me he can’t.”

  “Dad says Mr. McLeod looks like a keeper to him. He was just saying that out on the float.”

  “A keeper?” Uncle Paul said.

  I nodded. “Like you and him. Together. That’d be good, right?”

  “Ah,” Uncle Paul said.

  “Because I think I could handle it,” I said. “It’d be unusual to have your teacher in the family, but I don’t think it’d be a problem for me.”

  “Well, that’s a load off my mind,” Uncle Paul said. “But there’s another problem.”

  “What is it?” I couldn’t think of one.

  “You’re rushing us,” Uncle Paul said.

  “No, we’re not,” I said. “It’ll take the time it takes. It’ll work or it won’t work.”

  “Why does that sound exactly like your dad?”

  “Search me,” I said.

  Long-legged bugs skimmed the surface, right where our feet were in the water. That type of bug used to freak me out when I was younger. But I’m okay with them now. It takes the time it takes.

  We sat there quite a while, watching the water. And I was thinking.

  “Mr. McLeod never had a dad. He told Grandpa.”

  “I know,” Uncle Paul said.

  “So if he ever wanted to be a dad—you know, down the road. Would he know how?”

  “Yes,” Uncle Paul said. “He’d see how your dad does it.”

  • • •

  Then after a while Dad and Mr. McLeod came back. Dad was wiping the grease off his hands with gasoline on a rag. They trundled onto the pier.

  Mr. McLeod was skinning off his shirt. He was going to take another dip in the lake. Then in a quick move he was behind Uncle Paul. He reached down and had him under the arms. He was going to hoist him up and throw him in the lake.

  “No, you’re not going to do that,” Uncle Paul said, twisting around. “I’m bigger than you are.”

  “The bigger they are, the harder they fall,” Mr. McLeod said.

  They were both on their feet, grappling. They were basically acting a lot younger than they were, and getting closer and closer to the edge of the pier.

  “No. Stop. I don’t want to get my hat wet,” Uncle Paul said, grunting.

  “Or your hair, probably,” Mr. McLeod said, also grunting.

  For a second they were in the air, locked together, so they looked like a fit to me. Then a giant splat, and they were in the water, and Uncle Paul’s hat was floating away. Dad was laughing, and I was there, and it was great.

  We left them splashing around in the lake. We’d stretched the day as far as it would go, and we had a long drive ahead of us, Dad and I. What Mr. McLeod and Uncle Paul had ahead of them I wasn’t too sure.

  19

  On our way home we came down through Lake Geneva city. They’d strung some colored lights down at the dock, and a band was playing. Music drifted out on the lake and grown-up couples were beginning to dance. They reminded me of Mom and Dad dancing in front of the Christmas tree.

  It was dark when we hit the Illinois line. I was feeling a little older, or something. Trying to talk to Uncle Paul about him and Mr. McLeod was different for me. It was a little bit like being in middle school a year early. You’re drop-kicked into new territory. I was wondering how much change you have to go through before your voice does.

  I said to Dad, “I talked to Uncle Paul about how he and Mr. McLeod were getting along.”

  “What did you find out?” Dad said.

  “You can’t rush him.”

  “No. You can’t run his race. You can just be there for him at the finish line.”

  “Dad, can you fix everything?”

  “You mean cars?” he said. “Because I pretty much can.”

  “Cars are good,” I said, “but I meant other stuff.”

  “People?”

  “Yes.”

  “I couldn’t fix your grandpa,” Dad said. “I had to let him go.”

  So I saw Dad was still hurting about Grandpa. I didn’t think about Grandpa every day now. Most days, but not every day. Dad did.

  His shades were propped up on his Cubs cap. He’d be driving one-handed now, but he was setting a good example for me. It was Dad as usual, easy behind the wheel of the 4x4. But he was hurting.

  “Dad, how did you meet Mom?”

  “You know how. In college. I saw her in the student union one time. I had to stand up on a chair to get a better look. She was the number one most beautiful girl I’d ever seen in my life.”

  “So you went up to her?”

  “Are you kidding?” Dad said. “I didn’t know how to do that. I followed her home to the Tri Delt House.”

  “You stalked her?”

  “We didn’t have the word then,” Dad said.

  “Did you just trail after her until she noticed?”

  “No,” Dad said. “How pathetic would that be? I had a friend from home who was in Theta Chi fraternity. Jim Blassingame. We went through the yearbook and found her in the sorority picture: Marjorie Archer. Jim was the Theta Chi social chairman, so he knew the Tri Delt social chair. They set us up.”

  “Dad, you didn’t belong to a fraternity, right?”

  “No,” he said. “You had to wear a tie.”

  Now he was braking for the Route 64 off-ramp.

  “What did you say to get Mom to marry you?”

  “I told her my folks owned two houses. We could live in one of them, and she’d never be homeless.”

  “That’s it?”

  “I told her she could have any guy on the campus, but she was the only girl in the world for me.”

  “She bought it,” I said.

  “You’re here,” he said.

 
Then we were home.

  • • •

  It was night under the trees out back. We hadn’t done anything about Grandpa’s swing. The only light came from high in Grandma’s house, her bedroom. She wanted us to move the picture of her and Grandpa up to her living room, so we headed down to the basement. When I flipped the light, it was only the shop lighting over the workbench now. Nothing but swept concrete floor between us and the picture on the wall.

  “Dad, where’s Grandpa’s world?”

  “I boxed it back up. It was time,” he said. “I guess I thought if I put his whole life down here where he could see, he’d stay a little longer.”

  “Maybe he did,” I said.

  “I hadn’t thought of that,” Dad said.

  He was over by the workbench. Everything was in place except for a ball-peen hammer that looked like Grandpa had just put it down. Dad left it where it was and looked back at me.

  “How am I going to mean as much to you as my dad meant to me?” he said.

  “Dad, you do,” I said. “You’re there.”

  20

  Esther Wilhelm came into homeroom Tuesday morning, tripped over her own feet, fell hard, and skinned a shin. She’d grown another couple inches over the summer and kept tripping over herself.

  Then came Lynn Stanley. She was rocking a new look, showing some underwear straps under whatever else she was wearing. I didn’t get it.

  She dragged up the desk next to me. “Good weekend?” she inquired.

  “Great. Dad and I were up at Lake—”

  “So you know your uncle Paul and Mr. McLeod are an item.”

  I sighed. “And you know because . . .”

  “Your mom, my mom—me.” Lynn pointed at herself. “So do you think it’s just a summer thing or serious, your uncle Paul and Mr. McLeod?”

  “We’re monitoring it,” I said. “Dad and I. You work with what you’ve got, and it takes the time it takes, and it works or it doesn’t work.”

  “I have no idea what you just said,” Lynn said. “What did you bring for lunch?”

  “Who, me? I never look at my lunch till I have to. Why?”

  “Never mind,” Lynn said. “I brought extra in case the new student didn’t bring any. You know who I mean? Foreign? Differently abled? Hilary Evelyn Calthorpe?”

  “Oh, right. Where is she?”

  “Who?” Lynn said. “Oh. I don’t know.” She scanned the room. Ms. Roebuck was drifting around at the front. Raymond was taking roll. Sienna Searcy was organizing her Eastside girls. “Shut up, girls,” she was saying. “I’m speaking.” We were all there.

  Then in the door rolled a figure in a motorized wheelchair. This stopped everything but the clock. For one thing, he was a boy.

  “Now it gets interesting,” Lynn remarked.

  “You knew it was going to be a boy,” I said.

  “I googled the family, which is what Roebuck should have done.”

  The wheelchair made a smooth stop by the teacher’s desk. He was a small, spindly kid with a cap. Not a Cubs cap. Some kind of school uniform cap. A white shirt, miniature tie, small blazer, gray flannel shorts, one gray kneesock, and a black leather shoe. The other leg stuck out straight, in a cast. You could just make out toes.

  Ms. Roebuck looked down at him. “We were expecting a girl,” she said.

  “That’s what Mother said,” remarked Hilary Evelyn Calthorpe.

  The room gaped. He was kind of like a doll, with bright pink cheeks and one pink knee. Ice-blue eyes that took us all in. The cap. He could have been a transfer from Hogwarts.

  “Hilary and Evelyn are boys’ names in England,” he told us. “Evelyn with a long e. Why they aren’t boys’ names in this country I can’t think, except you people get everything wrong.”

  We were speechless. Even Sienna Searcy. “I am differently abled for the time being,” said Hilary, “because you drive on the wrong side of the road in this country. I stepped off the kerb on Michigan Avenue in front of the consulate. That’s kerb, spelled K-E-R-B. And I was struck from behind by an Uber car.

  “If you persist in driving this way, you must simply put up signs: ‘WE DRIVE ON THE WRONG SIDE OF THE ROAD. PLEASE BEAR THIS IN MIND.’”

  You’ll notice that we didn’t all rush his wheelchair, drag him out of it, and beat him up just for looking down his English nose at us.

  Ms. Roebuck was lost as always. “Well, anyway, Hilary,” she said, “welcome to homeroom. What brings you to our country?”

  “She should know this,” Lynn muttered. “She should have googled all this.”

  Hilary was politely surprised she didn’t know. “My mother is a diplomat. She has been made vice consul at our consulate in Chicago. She represents the United Kingdom in thirteen states.”

  Ms. Roebuck was blanking on this, totally. Hilary would probably have told her what a consulate is, but the bell rang. You can stretch out homeroom only so far, even in a story.

  Hilary quaked. “What on earth does that bell mean? Are we under attack? Is it the Germans?”

  It was first period. Except Raymond Petrovich said to Ms. Roebuck, “He can’t go to class until he’s signed the anti-bullying contract. School rule.”

  “Oh dear,” Ms. Roebuck said. “Where is one?”

  “I’ll print one out.”

  We’d all had to sign the anti-bullying contract on the first day. Absolutely no bullying allowed in this school. End of story.

  “How am I to bully anyone whilst I’m in this chair?” Hilary asked. “Am I to run them down and then reverse over them?”

  “Just sign here.” Raymond handed him a ballpoint.

  So that’s how Tuesday kicked off. It wasn’t a lockdown with helicopters, but it was better than nothing.

  “Come on,” Lynn said to me. “We’ll introduce ourselves.” She was up and climbing into her backpack and grabbing two lunches. We’d be late for first period, but so what? We had a lifetime supply of hall passes.

  When we got up to Hilary, we just naturally bowed because he was spindly and sitting down. Lynn was a little bit shy, which was new. “Hi, I’m Lynn. This is Archer.” She blushed, which was different. One of her underwear straps fell down. She worked it back with her free hand.

  Hilary seemed surprised. How many middle-schoolers roll out the welcome mat for newcomers? But here we were. “Charmed,” said Hilary.

  “Want to have lunch with us? We have a safe place, and I’ve brought you yours.” Lynn held up the brown bag.

  “That’s very kind,” said Hilary, but he was sort of suspicious of the brown bag.

  “I didn’t know what you’d like,” Lynn said. “But I knew you were English, so I brought shepherd’s pie from Trader Joe’s. It’s thawed, but won’t be hot, I’m afraid.”

  “Let’s have a look at it,” Hilary said.

  Lynn lifted the lid on a Tupperware container. Hilary and I peered into it. It was a gray mass with peas.

  “Oh my dear, I think not,” he said to Lynn. “Let’s go to the food court.”

  “We can’t,” Lynn explained. “The seventh graders would have us for lunch.”

  Hilary’s eyebrows climbed up to his cap. “Really? Didn’t the seventh graders have to sign that anti-bullying contract?”

  “Yes, but they could also beat you to a bloody pulp,” I explained. “And shake you upside down for your pocket change. They probably take PayPal. The anti-bullying contract is just to keep parents calm.”

  “Including the parents of bullies,” Lynn said.

  “Ah well, we have people for people like that.” Hilary raised a small white-cuffed hand and snapped his fingers.

  Everybody was heading out the door to first period. A gigantic guy was coming in. His black suit coat strained across his hulking shoulders. His hands were like catcher’s mitts. It was likely he had a full set
of steel teeth, except he didn’t smile. Remember Andy, the security guard at Westside? This guy was bigger.

  “And here is Reginald now.”

  Reginald?

  “As long as I have to navigate a public school in a wheelchair, Lady Christobel has assigned me Reginald from the consulate security detail.”

  Lady Christobel?

  “Lady Christobel, your mother?” Lynn said. “A lady in her own right as the daughter of the Earl of—”

  “Quite.” Hilary was unsurprised that Lynn knew. He also thought we ought to make it a foursome for lunch.

  A foursome for lunch? We were sixth graders. What we did was more like feeding from troughs. But Hilary pointed across the room. “What about that rather striking girl who looks like the North Pole?”

  It was Esther Wilhelm, fighting her way into her backpack, which tended to throw her off balance. She was about to duck out the door.

  “Hey, Esther,” Lynn yelled, “want to have lunch with us? Food court? We’ve got protection.” She pointed up at Reginald. Esther stared. Then nodded. Then ducked out the door.

  “She won’t have much to say,” Lynn told Hilary.

  “Ah, but I will,” he said.

  We scattered for first period. Reginald too, carrying Hilary’s books tied up in a strap. Behind us the printer ran off an extra class set of anti-bullying contracts.

  • • •

  They didn’t have tables for four in the food court. “Nothing so civilized,” as Hilary said. But the four of us staked out the end of a table and we were still there in the spring. Even long after the place filled up with sixth graders once they realized they didn’t have to pay to get in. But that gets ahead of the story.

  News of Reginald may have reached the food court before we did that first noon. But there’s always somebody who doesn’t get the word. And Reginald knew how to blend in, even though he was bigger than the soft drink dispenser.

  A campaign was going on in the food court to wean us off sugary drinks and sodas. We were supposed to drink plain water and eat fruit or something.

  “Do explain to me,” said Hilary. “You aren’t to eat sugar because it endangers your health, but you could be beaten to death for coming to lunch?”

 

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