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Authors: Lila Perl

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Next day Pop got some maps of the nearby towns around the college and talked to a few people, and the administration office said they'd give him an allotment equal to the rent of the apartment toward the monthly rental of
any house he found. Which meant the house had to be for rent at a pretty cheap price.

After about three days of cruising around in the nearby towns, Drew had to go get more maps. Most of the houses close to the college were already rented or owned by the college professors who had long-term contracts. Those that were left were either too expensive or else they were egg crates.

Inez said it wouldn't matter even if we moved to a town that was ten or fifteen miles away from the campus, since Drew would have the truck for daily transportation. She herself always used a bicycle for shopping and other errands.

One thing we found out from driving slowly through a lot of small town streets is that people are always glad to see the garbage man. Even though Drew had washed down the truck and it was now back to being filthy white and dirty yellow with big black letters that said it belonged to P
INE
R
IDGE
T
OWNSHIP
in California, you'd be surprised how many people came running out of their houses with bags of garbage as soon as they heard us coming.

One little old lady raced out with a whole bedsheet full of watermelon peels and cantaloupe rinds.

“My, I'm glad you came by this afternoon,” she said brightly. “Not one of your regular pickups, is it? Well, you couldn't have picked a better time. I'm just putting
up my watermelon pickle and I'm so glad to be getting rid of the garbage today before the weekend comes on. Bedsheet's old, too, so I thought that might as well go. You won't be coming by again a little later, will you? I'll have shrimp shells.”

She looked almost ready to cry, standing there on the sidewalk with her torn, bulging bedsheet, after Pop told her we weren't taking any garbage, only looking for a nice roomy house to rent.

On the other hand, Drew picked up some fantastic junk, even though he had expected the pickings to be slim in the East. One man who had some big black stovepipes sitting out on the sidewalk flagged us down and then asked if we'd like to take a peek in his garage. Inez got a couple of enormous old tubs and dye pots out of that one and also a lyre with three strings missing.

But although junk kept piling up in the truck, we didn't seem to be getting any closer to finding a place where we would be able to unload it all. By now we were looking around in a town called Havenhurst, about fourteen miles from the college. Like most of the towns we had looked through, it had a mixture of old houses and new houses, a dilapidated old shopping street called Broadway, and a whopping big, neon-lit shopping center called the Havenhurst Shoppers Mall.

We were grinding past a spread-out new ranch house with manicured grass and a red-and-white painted
jockey on the lawn when a girl came running down the driveway, all the time yelling over her shoulder, “Hey Ma, the garbage man!”

Only Drew and I were in the truck that day. Inez had gone bicycling to a patch of woods on the north edge of the campus to hunt for mushrooms.

“Step on it,” I said to Pop. “It's garbage this time for sure. Judging from the size of that kid, they eat a lot in that house.”

Because this girl was fat. And when I say fat, I don't mean
fat
. I mean FAT.

“Hey wait, mister,” the fat girl yelled, puffing her way toward us like a steam engine. “Please wait.” And to my surprise, Drew began slowing to a stop. Not because of her, but because just ahead of us at the corner of the street, half hidden by trees, sat an old silvery gray wooden house in the middle of a weed-grown yard and surrounded by a fence with a lot of the pickets missing. And nailed to the fence was a big, tired-looking sign that said T
HIS PROPERTY FOR SALE OR RENT
: I
NQUIRE
C
ALVIN
C
REASEY
, 108 B
ROADWAY
, H
AVENHURST
.

By now the fat girl was peering up into the cab of the truck, her cheeks and chin still shaking like jelly from that exhausting run down the driveway and along the street to the truck, maybe a whole twelve yards.

“Gee thanks for waiting, mister,” she gasped up at Drew. “My mother'll be out in a minute. See, we missed
the pickup yesterday and our Dispose-all's on the blink.”

“Forget it,” I said, leaning over Pop's shoulder to save him the trouble for once. “We don't take garbage.”

“You don't?” She looked pretty mad. Her hair, which was blonde and crinkly, seemed to stand up on end and her eyes, which were the same light hazel color as the freckles all over her cheeks, seemed to turn about three shades darker. She wasn't bad-looking and I figured she must have been just about my age—eleven, or maybe twelve. But as I said before, was she ever FAT.

“Then what are you riding around in a garbage truck for?” she wanted to know.

“That's our business,” Drew snapped. He was getting tired of explanations, and what with school opening for me in just one week and classes starting at the college very soon after, the whole thing was getting to be a drag.

“It's a long story,” I said apologetically.

“Listen,” Drew said wearily to the fat girl. “What can you tell us about that house, the one there on the corner with the F
OR
R
ENT
sign?”

She followed Drew's gaze. “That house. Oh, that's the old Creasey place. Isn't it awful? No one lives there now. In fact there's a neighborhood committee to get it condemned and torn down. My mother's the chairman,” she added proudly.

“Well congratulations and all that,” Pop said.

“But how can we get a look at it? I mean now.
Without going back to Broadway and hunting down this Mr. Creasey.”

The fat girl looked at Drew and then slyly shifted her eyes to me. “Well, it's locked—I guess . . . I mean, it's still private property. But if someone could crawl through a window. Well, of course, I couldn't—uh, that is, I wouldn't. But sometimes some of the neighborhood kids do, the smaller kids, that is. . .”

It took only a few minutes for me to crawl through the living-room window, walk across the creaky dusty floorboards of the big empty living room, and open the front door to Drew and the girl.

“What's it like, baby? Okay?” Pop brushed past me eagerly. He had a sense for these things—and besides he'd already seen the big yard that surrounded the place. I guess he knew that this was going to be the house.

The fat girl remained standing in the doorway, but I could tell from the way she didn't seem much interested in looking around that she'd been in the house before.

“It would be great to have somebody like you move into the neighborhood,” she said slowly, eyeing me in a funny way. “But you wouldn't be thinking of moving in
here
, would you?”

“Oh, I don't know,” I said, trying to sound cool about it all. “It's possible.”

The girl exploded into a burst of laughter, although something about that laugh had a nasty ring to it, too.

“Listen,” she said, sidling up to me in a confidential manner. “Nobody would move in here. This place is a dump. The last people that lived here were so awful they got run out of town.”

“Why?”

She grinned and tossed her head. “Never mind. I don't tell neighborhood gossip.”

“Then you shouldn't have mentioned it in the first place.”

“Listen,” the fat girl said, breathing heavily as she got even closer and went into a husky whisper. “The only kind of people who would ever rent or buy this place now is coloreds. That's why my mother and these other neighbors have this committee. Get it?”

I got it all right. But all I could see as I nodded dumbly was Inez' face when she heard about this. Mom would be livid. She might even throw things. There were some things she could get pretty sore about and one of them was prejudice.

For a minute I was tempted to tell the fat girl that my Mom was part American Indian and, therefore, so was I. And that was “colored,” wasn't it? But I decided not to say anything about it just then.

“Look,” I told her. “It's up to my folks, whatever my Mom and Pop decide. They might just take the place. They've got their reasons.” Then I decided to get even with her for what she said earlier. “I can't say anymore,
though. I don't tell family secrets.”

She looked a little stunned but I could tell she caught on. For a second or two we just stood there glaring at one another.

Then, all of a sudden, she broke out into a big picture-window smile. “Well,” she said, real warmly, “if you do move in here, I just know we'd be friends, huh? And I guess your folks would fix up the place so nobody'd ever even recognize it after a month or two.” She paused. “Oh, I s'pose I should introduce myself. I'm Glenda. Who are you?

And that—as I guess you guessed already—is how I met Fat Glenda.

3

That very same afternoon Drew and Inez and I drove to downtown Havenhurst to look up Mr. Calvin Creasey and see about renting the house. Of course, before that we had to drive back to “the box,” as Inez called the apartment, and pick her up and take
her
to see the house.

At first she couldn't believe it. But after we got there and I crawled in the living-room window again and unlocked the front door, Mom was really excited. She rushed all over the place from the basement to the third-floor attic.

“You know,” she said in a confidential whisper to Pop and me, after she calmed down a little, “it's spooky, absolutely spooky, to find a place as perfect as this.”

Of course, anybody else's mother would have screamed at how awful the kitchen was and would have had a fit about the rusty plumbing and the cracked tile in the bathroom. There
were
plenty of rooms, though. About ten or eleven, I guess, if you counted all the little funny-shaped ones, including the round one that was
shaped like a sharpened pencil point and stuck up at the top of the house.

After Mom finished looking around, Pop took her outside and showed her the yard and outlined some of his plans for where he would reassemble the two most important junk sculptures he had transported from California, and where he would pile his “raw materials.”

They seemed to have everything figured out, and I only hoped they wouldn't be disappointed when they went to see about renting the house. Drew must have been a little worried, too, because he kept warning Inez not to appear “too anxious” when they saw Mr. Creasey; that might make Mr. C. up the rent.

The thing that kept bothering me the most was that, even though it was a nice sunny afternoon and there were houses all up and down the street, not a single person came in sight the whole time we were there. Anybody would have known we were looking at the house for the second time that day because of the garbage truck parked out in front. Yet nobody showed up, not even Glenda.

All the way to Mr. Creasey's office, Inez kept humming and eating raw mushrooms from the bagful she'd gathered that morning on her bicycle trip to the woods. Every other mushroom out of the bag, she popped into Drew's mouth while he drove. Luckily, I had just had a chance to slap an L-burger together when we went home to get Inez and I was eating that now, cold. I know I said
I couldn't go on with the alphabet-burgers after sharing K-burgers with Toby at our last meal together, but I guess the prospect of having a friend again had cheered me up, and anyhow the L was sitting around handy at the moment.

Finding Mr. Creasey took a little while. We got to the old business section in Havenhurst all right and found 108 Broadway. It was an upstairs office over a hardware store that still had advertisements for barnyard feed in the window and rolls of chicken-coop wire for sale out front.

The stairway up to Mr. Creasey's office was so dusty that our shoes left prints on the steps. At the top, the sign lettered on the door said that Mr. Creasey was a lawyer, realtor, county clerk, insurance agent, tax consultant, private detective, and notary public.

Drew turned the knob, which squeaked as though it was hurting. The door opened with a groan and we all walked in. Mr. Creasey was nowhere in sight, nor was anybody else. There was a big desk with papers and ledgers on it, all covered with dust, and some old chairs with cracked leather seats and oatmeal-colored stuffing peeking out. In the corner there was a long row of dark green metal filing cabinets, standing about six feet high.

While Drew talked in an unnaturally loud voice to try to attract someone's attention, Inez stalked around the office looking for cobwebs. Not that Inez was finicky
about things like that or ever did “white glove” tests in other people's houses—not Inez. No, it was just that Mom really loved cobwebs and she knew right away that this was a good place to hunt for some. Back in California, she had never let anybody brush away cobwebs or even kill spiders for that matter.

“Because cobwebs are nature's original designs and can give you the most wonderful ideas,” she had once explained. “Like snowflakes, no two are ever alike.” When she found a cobweb, she would draw its patterns on a piece of paper and put it away for her designs in hand-blocking or batik-making or weaving or whatever she was excited about at the moment.

BOOK: Me and Fat Glenda
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