clinked it against Bobbyâs. âTo your new friends on the island.â
âWhat island?â
Ted Brautigan smiled and shot the last cigarette out of a crumpled pack. âYouâll find out,â he said.
⢠ ⢠ â¢
Bobby did find out, and it didnât take him twenty pages to also find out that Lord of the Flies was a hell of a book, maybe the best heâd ever read. Ten pages into it he was captivated; twenty pages and he was lost. He lived on the island with Ralph and Jack and Piggy and the littluns; he trembled at the Beast that turned out to be a rotting airplane pilot caught in his parachute; he watched first in dismay and then in horror as a bunch of harmless schoolboys descended into savagery, finally setting out to hunt down the only one of their number who had managed to remain halfway human.
He finished the book one Saturday the week before school ended for the year. When noon came and Bobby was still in his roomâno friends over to play, no Saturday-morning cartoons, not even Merrie Melodies from ten to elevenâhis mom looked in on him and told him to get off his bed, get his nose out of that book, and go on down to the park or something.
âWhereâs Sully?â she asked.
âDalhouse Square. Thereâs a school band concert.â Bobby looked at his mother in the doorway and the ordinary stuff around her with dazed, perplexed eyes. The world of the story had become so vivid to him that this real one now seemed false and drab.
âWhat about your girlfriend? Take her down to the park with you.â
âCarolâs not my girlfriend, Mom.â
âWell, whatever she is. Goodness sakes, Bobby, I wasnât suggesting the two of you were going to run off and elope.â
âShe and some other girls slept over Angieâs house last night. Carol says when they sleep over they stay up and hen-party practically all night long. I bet theyâre still in bed, or eating breakfast for lunch.â
âThen go to the park by yourself. Youâre making me nervous. With the TV off on Saturday morning I keep thinking youâre dead.â She came into his room and plucked the book out of his hands. Bobby watched with a kind of numb fascination as she thumbed through the pages, reading random snatches here and there. Suppose she spotted the part where the boys talked about sticking their spears up the wild pigâs ass (only they were English and said âarse,â which sounded even dirtier to Bobby)? What would she make of it? He didnât know. All his life they had lived together, it had been just the two of them for most of it, and he still couldnât predict how sheâd react to any given situation.
âIs this the one Brattigan gave you?â
âYeah.â
âAs a birthday present?â
âYeah.â
âWhatâs it about?â
âBoys marooned on an island. Their ship gets sunk. I think itâs supposed to be after World War III or something. The guy who wrote it never says for sure.â
âSo itâs science fiction.â
âYeah,â Bobby said. He felt a little giddy. He thought Lord of the Flies was about as far from Ring Around the Sun as you could get, but his mom hated science fiction, and if anything would stop her potentially dangerous thumbing, that would.
She handed the book back and walked over to his window. âBobby?â Not looking back at him, at least not at first. She was wearing an old shirt and her Saturday pants. The bright noonlight shone through the shirt; he could see her sides and noticed for the first time how thin she was, as if she was forgetting to eat or something. âWhat, Mom?â
âHas Mr. Brattigan given you any other presents?â
âItâs Brautigan , Mom.â
She frowned at her reflection in the window . . . or more likely it was his reflection she was frowning at. âDonât correct