T-shirt. He had a premonition of her doing the same thing fifty years from now, so familiar to each other theyâd be strangers. He thought: there is so much and so little we donât know about each other.
B ack in the trailer, he was restless. More sex? Theyâd already had sex twice. Doing it again would be strictly remedial; it would diagnose their dissatisfaction. Instead he complained about the trailer, which was starting to seem like a decoration left out too long. The carpet was filthy. The trash can was filled with condom wrappers and used condoms. Tad threw away an uneaten orange to make the trash can look more domestic.
Then he had an idea. In his wallet was a Drive Way business card with the phone number of Gar Floydâs motel in Jacksonville. He found the card and dialed the number. After the clerk connected him to Gar Floydâs room, it rang five times before someone on the other end picked up, fumbled the receiver, and said hello.
Amy studied his expression. âWho is it?â she whispered.
âGar Floyd?â Tad asked. Gar Floyd said yes tentatively, as if expecting bad news. He sounded nothing like Gar Floyd.
âYou donât know me,â Tad said, âbut Iâm driving your car to Florida. I wanted to tell you that I, that weâve, been wondering about you. You spend time in a personâs car and you begin to wonder about him.â
âAbort,â Amy said, waving her hands. âAbort.â
Tad had forgotten why he originally wanted to call. Gar Floyd was clearing his throat, breathing roughly. What had he expected Gar Floyd to say? âOh,â he said. âI thought you were calling from the hospital. My wifeâs getting treatment. Sheâs sick.â
âIâm sorry to hear that,â Tad said.
âThey prescribed these sleeping pills and, ever since, I keep dreaming Iâm back in the Air Force. Iâm doing something wrong but no one will tell me what. Thatâs just what it was like.â He paused to catch his breath. âListen, my wifeâs not doing so well. What time is it where you are?â
Tad looked at his watch and told him.
âWell,â Gar Floyd said after a while, âhowâs the car?â
âItâs great,â Tad said. âItâs a great car.â
âThe transmissionâs been rebuilt. The tires are brand-new.â
âThe tires,â Tad said, âare unbelievable.â He felt his stomach tighten. âWe shouldnât have bothered you.â
âWhoâs there with you?â
âAmy, my wife. Weâre just married.â Telling him this, Tad remembered that this was what heâd called to tell him. He thought it would be funny to tell Gar Floyd about getting married. âWeâre in Arizona.â
Amy stared straight ahead, implacable, like a rigidly disciplined athlete.
âWhat a great time,â Gar Floyd was saying. âCareless.â
âSure,â Tad said. âWeâre seeing all there is to see. Your carâs in good hands, thatâs what I called to tell you. Weâre checking all the fluids, using high octane. Youâll have it in a few days.â
âIâve got a rental now,â Gar Floyd said. âAn Escort. Itâs a lousy car. The wind blows it all over the road. What kind of car do you drive?â
Tad drove an Escort. He didnât say anything. He watched Amy flop down on the bed and thought about his lousy, beef-brown Escort and waited for Gar Floyd to ask another question.
âYou woke me up,â Gar Floyd said. âThe least you can do is talk to me.â
Silence on both ends of the line, Tad in Arizona and Gar Floyd in Florida. Tad apologized again. He wished Gar Floyd and his wife well. He stressed the imminence of their arrival. Good-bye, he said. All right, Gar Floyd said.
He sat next to Amy on the bed and patted her arm while she studied the ceiling. âJust
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