There was a Town Taxi at the curb. A man in a poplin jacket was leaning in the passenger window,paying the driver. Behind him was a little cluster of luggage and paper bags, the kind with handles.
âThat must be the man who just rented the room on the third floor,â Liz said. Her mouth had done its shrinking trick again. She stood on the top step of the porch, appraising the manâs narrow fanny, which poked toward them as he finished his business with the taxi driver. âI donât trust people who move their things in paper bags. To me a personâs things in a paper sack just looks slutty .â
âHe has suitcases, too,â Bobby said, but he didnât need his mother to point out that the new tenantâs three little cases werenât such of a much. None matched; all looked as if they had been kicked here from California by someone in a bad mood.
Bobby and his mom walked down the cement path. The Town Taxi pulled away. The man in the poplin jacket turned around. To Bobby, people fell into three broad categories: kids, grownups, and old folks. Old folks were grownups with white hair. The new tenant was of this third sort. His face was thin and tired-looking, not wrinkled (except around his faded blue eyes) but deeply lined. His white hair was baby-fine and receding from a liverspotted brow. He was tall and stooped-over in a way that made Bobby think of Boris Karloff in the Shock Theater movies they showed Friday nights at 11:30 on WPIX. Beneath the poplin jacket were cheap workingmanâs clothes that looked too big for him. On his feet were scuffed cordovan shoes.
âHello, folks,â he said, and smiled with what looked like an effort. âMy nameâs Theodore Brautigan. I guess Iâm going to live here awhile.â
He held out his hand to Bobbyâs mother, whotouched it just briefly. âIâm Elizabeth Garfield. This is my son, Robert. Youâll have to pardon us, Mr. Brattiganââ
âItâs Brautigan, maâam, but Iâd be happy if you and your boy would just call me Ted.â
âYes, well, Robertâs late for school and Iâm late for work. Nice to meet you, Mr. Brattigan. Hurry on, Bobby. Tempus fugit .â
She began walking downhill toward town; Bobby began walking uphill (and at a slower pace) toward Harwich Elementary, on Asher Avenue. Three or four steps into this journey he stopped and looked back. He felt that his mom had been rude to Mr. Brautigan, that she had acted stuck-up. Being stuck-up was the worst of vices in his little circle of friends. Carol loathed a stuck-up person; so did Sully-John. Mr. Brautigan would probably be halfway up the walk by now, but if he wasnât, Bobby wanted to give him a smile so heâd know at least one member of the Garfield family wasnât stuck-up.
His mother had also stopped and was also looking back. Not because she wanted another look at Mr. Brautigan; that idea never crossed Bobbyâs mind. No, it was her son she had looked back at. Sheâd known he was going to turn around before Bobby knew it himself, and at this he felt a sudden darkening in his normally bright nature. She sometimes said it would be a snowy day in Sarasota before Bobby could put one over on her, and he supposed she was right about that. How old did you have to be to put one over on your mother, anyway? Twenty? Thirty? Or did you maybe have to wait until she got old and a little chicken-soupy in the head?
Mr. Brautigan hadnât started up the walk. He stood at its sidewalk end with a suitcase in each hand and the third one under his right arm (the three paper bags he had moved onto the grass of 149 Broad), more bent than ever under this weight. He was right between them, like a tollgate or something.
Liz Garfieldâs eyes flew past him to her sonâs. Go , they said. Donât say a word. Heâs new, a man from anywhere or nowhere, and heâs arrived here with half his