age Eight 'PERSPECTI VES BR yBuErtnEavDIE ..yBurton Gavitt T TWAS THE SAME DAY that Pat saw them nft the motor out of a '37 Chevrolet for overhauling in Ab- ram's ge.e'- that he found out that Eddie Dun the lkid downstairs, was com- ng upstairs for a couple weeks. Pat didn't say anything right away when his :mother said that that was what she and Mrs. Dunn na been talking about sthat afternoon when Pat came home from school. He adn't hung around the souse but had gone over to Abram's. "Well, dn't you think it's nice to have "omeone to shcare your bed with you for r few weeks, Pat?" Mrs. Lewis asked him. "Okay, LC gss-- "Well, sose kids are just never satis- fed," she s:d:to her husband. Eddie Du.s) had lived downstairs for Five years 1 t his was the first time Pat had ever ha. much more to do with him than he haw h any other kid in the cneighborc L For one thing Eddie was smaller thn te average kid and he had chapped S in-: s the winter time. Eddie wiped his rIns nose, on the backs of his hands _.n hat made them chap more, and sies that he drank three glasses of had A milk every day be- sides what I srsnk at meal times. He sad to. The onJy', tissn. that Eddie Dunn was sood at was mar- les. Last spring in the 'acant lot he een the parked cars Eddie had seen champ almost every Say they laeSs. He won all the other kids' marhLesc ,nd then took them out with his ttrdit hands and looked at them. Most of te tsne Pat saw Eddie as a small kid .t Lol, marching in to an assembly 9n te auditorium single file with his cs;. In any sort of a crowd Eddie looket.ke'a dwarf. Then Eddie was always cseIt.tng for someone to pass the ball to nam when the gym class :played socce' an the playground be- tween line .madecrooked by spilling white hioe isfea tin can. But no one ever passed t: "Sall to Eddie Dunn: and some timen e cied, yes, cried, when the tids grabcd is' hat during lunch recess before the ds yang. Eddie had cried. well, twice, is had hollered something awful for "-c. It had a tassel on the top that the :tds held it by when they threw it fres ' e to another while Eddie danced 1 ee them. It was ce ftn that Eddie was coming because ant TEsday night Pat's mother told him dre Dunn was going away the next morning and Eddie would be eating l.unch with tem. "And clean cur room up and make cour sbed at'.r, Dunn is coming up tere tonig "5' baby and you can't let tim thiik _ .On't keep house.' his snother adde. While P r ed his room up and made the hes ing sure the red striped bed spread cs smooth, he was con- scious of the buzzer in the kitchen, -It had not sounded. yet he could imagine tts sound and the sound of a door open- ing followed ay a draft, his mother ask- ing someone teplease close the door and someonecc idt the atmosphere of out- doors harssnsg around his overcoat coming into the living room. The wait- tng time went fast existed for a certain ength of time. and was gone The bze' finally sounded. It said, "Hurry, Cots'o. com'on, hurry." His fathers voice Pop's, in the living soom and sn.her voice that is not so well known Slowly, '"5 _ not to get there with lis mother w talked through the kit- ehen and cuse oom. The kitchen fau- cet drippe ' saw Mr. Dunn and Eddie in te .- room, Eddie, the hat esith the t.e n his hand. Mr. Lewis held his news''viaer limply and was smil- ng, nodding: cwhat Mr. Dunn was say- sug about the temperature dropping to ten above 'ad nout the anti-freeze. It was a new combination because Mr. Dunn had never been upstairs before. His coat didn't fit him right. Or it wasn't pulled down on his shoulders because it was too far above his shirt collar. He didn't have a scarf on and it made him look fragile, not very much of a chest. Eddie passed his right hand, fingers out, in front of his face. He said: "H'ya, Pat." "H'ya, Eddie," Mr. Dunn stopped talking and passed his forefinger around the inside of his collar. Pat wondered where his mother was. He felt it. Pop did, too, because he was trying to smile. "Uh, how long is the missus going to the floor. He stopped smiling the way he had been. He was "Pop" again, Pat sensed, and not Mr. Lewis. Pop was tuning in on Eddie Cantor's program. The guests were gone. The living room was like those old fashioned ones where people have stopped having fun, gaudy, tired, the taste of sickishness late at night sitting on your brain. It always followed. It became too much in the living room and Pat took his Popular Mechanics to his room where it was cooler. He went to bed early. It was a new idea. "Just like a brother." It would have been worth having if the guy was one that Soon Eddie began to be able to run the whole way and the other kids saw them come in, talking about something no one else knew about. Pat and Eddie began putting their coats in the same locker, And when they played soccer on the playground, Eddie would get on Pat's team and play center half-back because Pat would pick him. Pat could see Eddie was playing better than he used to. So what if he did drink Grade A milk? Pat's finding out that Eddie was like a brother came suddenly. That was after the kids at school began never to see one of them without seeing the other. By that time the novelty of it had worn off for the other kids. Along about two o'clock in the after- noons while the class in spelling was going, on the brother feeling got awfully strong, but Pat had to wait until three- thirty before anything could be done. He and Eddie would be the first ones out of school, but they never got down soon enough to beat the crowd of kids that went to buy candy at the small store painted green two blocks way from the school. The store had clapboard sides. There was a small oil-burning stove in it that Pat had never seen work. A circus poster with a' clown's face that said July 6 was balanced in the window. The man behind the counter of the store had a bad eye that ran. All he ever had to say was, "Keep back there. Youse kids'll bust the showcase if you don't watch out." But you pushed and shoved to get to the counter almost every time. Everyone did. Sometimes fights started on the outside of the crowd. If you got to the 'counter you slapped your nickel or five pennies down and hollered for five of the pieces of green candy with sugar on it. They came sliding across the scratched counter from the man's hand as he brought them out of the box and you put them in your pocket. Everyone hollered what they wanted and the man put the money in the pocket of his dirty white sweater. Then you pusned out of the crowd. It was fun pushing with Eddie, shoving to the door. You can be rough in a crowd and not get found out. EDDIE was upstairs in the Lewis' flat almost every evening and it seemed to Pat they were more like brothers with everything that went on. You didn't say anything about it though. Pat didn't even think of saying anything. One night they talked about putting up a shack in the vacant lot. It would be easy. Just put a roof over the hole a steam shovel had begun digging and some sides to keep the walls from crumb- ling. That would be in the spring and it would have a sign, the shack would, Rangers' Club, over the door. Pat could get some old stove-pipe from Abram and have a chimney and roast potatoes and eat them. They said those kinds of things. If they played marbles on the living room rug the one who wasn't shooting had to stand with his heels together and toes apart to keep the marbles from going under the piano or down the hot air radiator: The living room was really too small for big rings so they stuck to playing square pots. Pat's father would come into the liv- ing room after a while and say: "How about you two joes drinking some milk before you hit the hay?" Pat and Eddie would put their marbles away and go to the kitchen table and eat graham cracks with their milk. When they undressed in the bathroom, Pat could see better how skinny Eddie was. The fun didn't stop when they got in bed either. It was usually Pat, though sometimes Eddie, who grabbed the other and began to wrestle and pinch. Some- times the bed clothes came out at the bottom of the bed and Eddie hollered because his feet were suddenly cold. (Continued on Page Ten) By TRISTAN MEINECKE be away, Mr. Dunn?" It didn't sound like Pop, or as though it was something he meant to say.' "My gracious, Harold " Pat heard his mother say somewhat irritably. "You, know Mrs. Dunn's going away for a couple weeks. How are you Mr. Dunn?" Mr. Dunn stopped fingering his collar and said: "Just fine, Mrs. Lewis," and thanked Pat's mother for offering to take care of Eddie while his wife was away. He'd have to be working late most nights, Mr. Dunn said, and so Eddie might get pretty lonesome unless he was with someone he knew real well. "Well, I'm sure everything will be just fine. And it'll be company for Pat. Just like he had a brother." Mrs. Lewis smiled at the two boys. "Won't you sit down, Mr. Dunn?" "No, thank you, we've got a lot to take care of yet so we'd better say good- night." Mr. Dunn smiled and took his hand away from his collar. "Com'on, Eddie. And thank you again." PAT'S FATHER closed the door after the callers. He bolted it with the nightlatch and picked the newspaper off a special section with Miss Marquardt on the first floor". didn't cry. Maybe it would go by with- out anybody noticing it. Eddie was in It was a surprise and felt funny the next day at noon when everyone was putting on coats and hats and overshoes to have Eddie look at him as if there was something special and say, "H'ya," and pass his hand in front of his face. Pat saw Eddie tell a kid something and look over to where he was. "Eddie's staying at your house, isn't he, hey?" Jimmy Stephenson asked. "Fun, hey?" That was the first one. There were several others. "Did Eddie's mother die? What hap- pened?" a girl asked. They all knew it was so before they asked and they all said it the same way. Pat only said a little. You didn't shout about it when you had a kid like Eddie living with you. That was the first noontime Pat and Eddie ate together. They walked back to school together and Pat saw some of the kids whispering at the lockers before arithmetic began. It helped to know that he had something over the other kids. After that on some mornings Pat and Eddie ran all the way to school, or as far as Eddie could without stopping.