his hand onto the mibraccâs shoulder. Mr. Cuthbert paid him no mind. Jack joined the procession, putting his hand on Tonelâs shoulder and trucking along in his friendâs wake. Tonel was humming the chorus of the new video by Ruggy Qaeda, the part with the zombies machine-gunning the yoga class.
After Mr. Cuthbert dropped into his chair and picked up his cards, Jack and Tonel circled the room two, three, four times, with Tonel finally bursting into song. Never did the mibracc give them a second glance. Odd as it seemed, the liquid in the glasses still hadnât settled down; it was moving around as if someone were stirring it.
Around then Ragland came out from behind his counter, wielding a wet, rolled-up towel. Silly as it sounded, being snapped by the old locker room attendant was a serious threat. Ragland was the ascended Kung-Fu master of the towel snap. He could put a bruise on your neck that would last six weeks. Laughing and whooping, Tonel and Jack ran outside.
A white face peered out of the window in the clubhouseâs terrace door. The door swung open and a plain, slightly lumpish girl in a white apron appeared. Gretchen Karst.
âIâm pregnant, Jack,â said Gretchen, her sarcastic, pimply face unreadable. âMarry me tonight. Take me off to college with you tomorrow.â
âHow do you know itâs me?â protested Jack. âIâm not the onlyâI mean even Tonel said heââ
âTonel is a horn worm. All I gave him was a hand job. And it didnât take very long. Jack, thereâs a justice of the peace out on Route 501. Ronnie Blevins. He works at Rash Decisions Tattoo. I found him online. Since itâs Saturday, theyâre open till midnight. Iâm off work right now, you know. I started early today.â
âStop it, Gretchen. You and meâitâs notââ
âIâm serious,â said Gretchen, although there was in fact a good chance that she was scamming him. Gretchen had a twisted mind. âYouâre my best chance, Jack,â she continued. âMarry me and take me with you. Iâm smart. I like sex. And Iâm carrying your son.â
âUhââ
Just then someone shouted for Gretchen from the corner of the clubhouse building. It was Gretchenâs dad, standing at the edge of the parking lot. Heâd trimmed his flattop to high-tolerance precision and he was wearing his shiny silver jogging suit. All set for the weekly meeting at the Day Six Synodâs tabernacle.
Gretchen could talk about the Day Six Synod for hours. It was a tiny splinter religion based on the revelation that Armageddon, the last battle, was coming one-seventh sooner than the Seventh Day Adventists had thought. We were already in the end times, in fact, with the last act about to be ushered in by manifestations of Shekinah Glory, this being the special supernatural energy that Godâand Satanâuse to manifest themselves. The pillar of fire that led the Israelites to the promised land, the burning bush that spake to Mosesâthese had been Shekinah Glory. The Day Six Synod taught that our Armageddonâs Shekinah Glory would take the form of evil UFOs pitted against winged angels.
Karl Karstâs jogging suit was silver to remind him of the Shekinah Glory. The Day Six Synod meetings featured impressively high-end computer graphics representing the Glory in its good and evil forms. Though Mr. Karst was but a county school-bus mechanic, some of the core founders of the Day Six Synod were crackpot computer hackers.
âShake a leg or weâll be late,â shouted Mr. Karst. âHi, Jack and Tonel. Wait till you see who Iâve got with me, Gretchen!â
âIâll deal with you later,â said Gretchen to Jack with a slight smile. Surely sheâd only been teasing him about the pregnancy. She made the cell phone gesture with her thumb and pinky. âWeâll