
Grinning, unaware that he will die both a virgin and a backup shortstop, Gary throws a Shopper on to the stoop of Tom Billingsley’s house (he can hear Doc’s mower yowling out back), and swoops across the street again towards the Reed house. Dave tosses the Frisbee to Susi Geller and then takes the Shopper when Gary flips it to him.
“Thanks for getting the Frisbee back,” Dave says.
“No problem.” He nods toward the redhead. “Who’s she?”
Dave laughs, not unkindly. “Never mind, little man. Don’t even bother to ask.”
Gary thinks of chasing it a little, then decides it would probably be better to quit while he’s ahead-he got the Frisbee, after all, and she applauded him, and the sight of her bouncing around in that little halter would have gotten an overcooked noodle hard. Surely that is enough for a summer afternoon as hot as this one.
Above and behind them, at the top of the hill, the red van begins to move, creeping slowly up on the corner.
“You coming to the game tonight?” Gary asks Dave Reed. “We got the Columbus Rebels.
Should be good.”
“You gonna play?”
“I should get a couple of innings in the field and at least one ay-bee.”
“Probably not, then,” Dave says, and yodels a laugh which makes Gary wince. The Reed twins look like young gods in their cut-off tees, he thinks, but when they open their mouths they bear a suspicious resemblance to the Hager Twins of Hee Haw.
Gary glances down toward the house on the corner of Poplar and Hyacinth, across from the store. The last house on the left, as in the horror movie of the same name. There is no car in the driveway, but that means nothing; it could be in the garage.
