After
The second show was
When I saw
At about eleven-thirty, the movie ended. An intermission started, and the area around the snack stand lit up. Here and there, headlights came on and engines started. Apparently, we weren’t the only people who needed to get home.
Since I was already behind the wheel, I asked Slim, “Want
She was
Slim didn’t answer for a few seconds. Then she said, “We told everyone
“Yeah, true. Maybe you’d better.”
“I suppose so.”
Leaning out the window, I reached over and hooked the speaker box onto its pole. Then I brought myself back into the car and opened the door.
And realized my mistake. If I went around to the other side of the car so Slim could scoot over behind the wheel, I would end up sitting next to Rusty on the way home.
I wanted to sit next to Slim, not Rusty.
“What’s wrong?” she asked.
I couldn’t tell her. We were pals, buddies, best friends. If she found out I
“Nothing,” I said. “I’m fine.”
“Are you sure? If you really
“Nah, that’s okay.” I climbed out and shut the door. Starting to feel lousy, I walked around to the other side. By the time I reached the passenger door, Slim and Rusty had both scooted over.
I sat beside Rusty and swung the door shut.
Leaving the headlights off, Slim drove slowly forward down the slope of the hump from which we’d viewed the movies. At the bottom, she made a sharp turn onto the cross-lane.
She put on the parking lights. A couple of times, she stopped to let people walk by. At the end of the lane, she waited for a car to pass us before she pulled out.
She didn’t cut anyone off. She didn’t do anything wrong or even rude. Neither did Rusty or I.
In fact, we’re pretty sure that what happened a few minutes later had nothing to do with any of the cars from the drive-in. Those exiting ahead of us had all turned the other way at Mason Road. And none came out after us. None that we noticed, anyway.
For a while, Slim’s Pontiac seemed to be the only car on the road. We were about ten miles north of town, midway between Grandville and Clarksburg.
We had forest on the right.
On the left was the old graveyard. If it had a name, we didn’t know it. Nobody’d been buried there since about 1920. We’d explored it a few times, though never at night. It had a lot of very cool tombstones and statues and stuff.
Driving by, the three of us snuck glances at it the way we usually did. I think we wanted to make sure nobody was digging up bodies… or crawling out of any graves.
No one was.
But a car sat between the old stone posts of its entry gate. A car without any lights on.
“Uh-oh,” Slim said. I felt our speed decrease slightly. “Was that a cop car?”
“Didn’t look like one,” Rusty said.
“It wasn’t,” I confirmed. Being the son of Grandville’s police chief, I knew what every cop car looked like: not just ours, but those of all the nearby towns, plus the county cars and state cars.
“Thought it might be a speed trap,” Slim said.
“Nope,” I told her.
“Cool place to make out,” Rusty said.
Slim and I both laughed.
“Don’t you think?”
“No,” Slim said. “For one thing, it’s right by the road where everyone can see you. Not to mention the bone orchard. You wouldn’t catch
“Wouldn’t catch
“What?” Slim asked.
“I think it’s coming,” he said.
“Huh?” Slim glanced at the rearview mirror. “I don’t… oh.”