Joyland
small crew of gazoonies, and by the time the CLOSED FOR THE SEASON sign went up out front, we had raked and cut every lawn, prepared every flowerbed for winter, and scrubbed down every joint and shy. We slapped together a prefab corrugated metal shed in the backyard and stored the food carts (called grub-rollers in the Talk) there for the winter, each popcorn wagon, Sno-Cone wagon, and Pup-a-Licious wagon snugged under its own green tarp.
When the gazoonies headed north to pick apples, I started the winterizing process with Lane Hardy and Eddie Parks, the ill-tempered vet who ran Horror House (and Team Doberman) during the season. We drained the fountain at the intersection of Joyland Avenue and Hound Dog Way, and had moved on to Captain Nemo’s Splash & Crash—a much bigger job—when Bradley Easterbrook, dressed for traveling in his black suit, came by.
“I’m off to Sarasota this evening,” he told us. “Brenda Rafferty will be with me, as usual.” he smiled, showing those horse teeth of his. “I’m touring the park and saying my thank-yous. To those who are left, that is.
“Have a wonderful winter, Mr. Easterbrook,” Lane said.
Eddie muttered something that sounded to me like eat a wooden ship, but was probably have a good trip.
“Thanks for everything,” I said.
He shook hands with the three of us, coming to me last. “I hope to see you again next year, Jonesy. I think you’re a young man with more than a little carny in his soul.”
But he didn’t see me the following year, and nobody saw him. Mr. Easterbrook died on New Year’s Day, in a condo on John Ringling Boulevard, less than half a mile from where the famous circus winters.
“Crazy old bastid,” Parks said, watching Easterbrook walk to his car, where Brenda was waiting to receive him and help him in.
Lane gave him a long, steady look, then said: “Shut it, Eddie.”
Eddie did. Which was probably wise.
One morning, as I walked to Joyland with my croissants, the Jack Russell finally trotted down the beach to investigate me.
“Milo, come back!” the woman called.
Milo turned to look at her, then looked back at me with his bright black eyes. On impulse, I tore a piece from one of my pastries, squatted, and held it out to him. Milo came like a shot.
“Don’t you feed him!” the woman called sharply.
“Aw, Mom, get over it,” the boy said.
Milo heard her and didn’t take the shred of croissant . . . but he did sit up before me with his front paws held out. I gave him the bite.
“I won’t do it again,” I said, getting up, “but I couldn’t let a good trick go to waste.”
The woman snorted and went back to her book, which was thick and looked arduous. The boy called, “We feed him all the time. He never puts on weight, just runs it off.”
Without looking up from her book, Mom said: “What do we know about talking to strangers, Mike-O?”
“He’s not exactly a stranger when we see him every day,” the boy pointed out. Reasonably enough, at least from my point of view.
“I’m Devin Jones,” I said. “From down the beach. I work at Joyland.”
“Then you won’t want to be late.” Still not looking up.
The boy shrugged at me— whattaya gonna do, it said. He was pale and as bent-over as an old man, but I thought there was a lively sense of humor in that shrug and the look that went with it. I returned the shrug and walked on. The next morning I took care to finish my croissants before I got to the big green Victorian so Milo wouldn’t be tempted, but I waved. The kid, Mike, waved back. The woman was in her usual place under the green umbrella, and she had no book, but—as per usual—she didn’t wave to me. Her lovely face was closed. There is nothing here for you, it said. Go on down to your trumpery amusement park and leave us alone.
So that was what I did. But I continued to wave, and the kid waved back. Morning and night, the kid waved back.
The Monday after Gary “Pop” Allen left for Florida—bound for Alston’s All-Star Carnival in Jacksonville, where he had a job waiting as shy-boss—I arrived at Joyland and found Eddie Parks, my least favorite old timer, sitting in front of Horror House on an apple-box. Smoking was verboten in the park, but with Mr. Easterbrook gone and Fred Dean nowhere in evidence, Eddie seemed to feel it safe to flout the rule. He was smoking with his gloves on, which would have struck me as strange if he ever took them off, but he never seemed
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