“Raymond,” Dirk and I say in unison.
“It’s just that there’s nothing we can do,” I finish.
“Yeah.” Dirk shrugs. “What can we do?”
“They’re right, Raymond,” Graham says. “Things are blurry.”
“In fact I feel like a big smudge,” Dirk says.
I look over at Raymond and then back at Dirk.
“He’s dead and all but that doesn’t mean he wasn’t a jerk,” Dirk says, pushing his plate away.
“He wasn’t a jerk, Dirk,” I tell him, suddenly laughing. “Jerk Dirk, Dirk jerk.”
“What do you mean, Tim?” Dirk asks, looking straight at me. “After that shit he pulled with Carol Banks?”
“Oh Christ,” Graham says.
“What shit did he pull with Carol Banks?” I ask, after a moment of silence. Carol and I had been seeing each other off and on throughout our junior and senior years. She went to Camden a week before Jamie died. I haven’t spoken to her for a year. I don’t think she even came back this summer.
“He was f**king her behind your back,” Dirk says, and he gets pleasure out of telling me this.
“He screwed her ten, twelve times, Dirk,” Graham says. “Don’t make it seem like it was some hot affair or anything.”
I had never really liked Carol Banks anyway. I lost my virginity to her a year before we actually started dating. Cute, blond, cheerleader, good SATS, nothing too great. Carol had always called me nonchalant, a word I never understood the meaning of, a word I looked up in a number of French dictionaries and could never find. I always suspected that Jamie and Carol had done something but since I never really liked Carol that much (only in bed and even there I was unsure) I sit at the table, uncaring, not moved by what everyone but me knew.
“You, like, all knew this?” I ask.
“You always told me you never really liked Carol,” Graham says.
“But you all knew?” I ask again. “Raymond—did you know?”
Raymond squints for a moment, his eyes fixed on a point that he can’t see, and he nods, doesn’t say anything.
“So what, big deal, right?” Graham says more than asks.