Peggy was trying to decide between her pink poodle skirt and the black and white checkered, when her mother called from the bottom of the stairs.
"Peg," she shouted, "You have a phone call."
"Coming, Mom." She tossed the skirts on her bed. "Checkers," she thought as she scampered down the steps.
"Slow down," her father muttered from behind the sports section of the Daily Gazette.
"Sure, Pop," she said, not slowing down.
"You going to watch Perry Como with me tonight?" he asked.
"Got a date, Pop."
"She's going to the passion pit with Johnny," Sally said in an annoying sing song voice.
Peggy gave her little sister a dirty look and went into the front hall to pick up the phone.
"Keep it short honey," her mother called from the kitchen, "Supper is almost ready."
Peggy picked up the phone. "Hello?"
"Hey Peg, it's Bobby."
Peggy drew in her breath, and a long moment passed before she said, "Are you home? I didn't think you coming back."
"Oh, well, I had a change of plans."
"And you didn't call me for, like, a month?"
"Well, I was sort of mixed up about where we left things."
"Really? I thought it was pretty simple. You were leaving for college, I was staying here and working at Woolworth's."
"Aw, geez, Peg. Look, I was hoping if you weren't doing anything tonight..."
"I have a date."
"Supper's on the table," she heard her father shout.
"Coming, Pop. Bobby, I've got to go."
"I'll call you."
"It's a free country," she said, and hung up. She went into the kitchen and sat at the table with the rest of her family.
She poured herself a glass of milk and dished a spoonful of tuna noodle casserole on to her plate. As she took her first bite, she heard her mother clear her throat. She looked up to see both her parents scowling at her.
"You're going out with that Sawicki kid?" her father grumbled.
"Yeah, we've been going out."
Her mother shook her head. "It's just, that, well, we don't think-"
"He's a hood," her father snapped.
Peggy sighed. "He's not a hood."
"I think he's a dreamboat," Sally said, "I think he looks like Tony Curtis."
"You shut your tater trap," her father said. He wagged his finger at Peggy. "You're an adult now, so I can't tell you not to see him, but by god, that greaseball ain't coming in this house. I'd feel like I have to count the silverware when he left."
"How would you know how much silverware we have?" Sally mumbled.
"I told you to shut it."
His wife patted his hand. "Honey, don't get riled."
"Has he even got a job?"
"Yes," Peggy said, "He works at the Texaco station."
"Pump jockey, there's a career."
"He's a mechanic."
"Peggy," her mother said in a tone that she probably thought was soothing, "We are just worried. We don't want you to get into any more boy trouble."
Peggy angrily chewed a bite of casserole, then, trying to sound calm, said, "I can take care of myself."
Her father muttered something under his breath, and the conversation withered away.
When everyone had finished eating, Peggy's mother forced a smile on her face and said, "Who wants dessert? We've got Jello!"
Peggy declined the offer, and excused herself from the table. She went back up to her bedroom to prepare for her date. She matched a mint green sleeveless blouse with the checkered skirt. With a pair of ankle socks and her saddle shoes, she thought she had a cute look.
She touched up her fingernails and make up, then brushed her hair and tied it in a ponytail.
Checking the clock, she saw that she still had a little time before Johnny was due to pick her up. She sat and looked at her reflection in her vanity mirror.
Bobby's call had really unsettled her. Why did he have to come back to town and confuse things? She had spent months getting over him. Or she thought she had. Now she wasn't so sure.
A beeping car horn pulled her out of her thoughts. She dashed down the stairs.
"A man knocks on the door, he doesn't sit in the car and blow the horn," her father griped.
"You said he couldn't come to the house," she reminded him.
"You should take a sweater, honey," her mother said.
"Mom, it's eighty degrees outside."
"You'll get chilly once it's dark.'
"Not with Johnny, she won't," Sally snickered.
"I'll be fine, Mom," Peggy said.
"If you come home late, come home quiet," her father hollered as she headed out the door.
Johnny was at the curb, leaning on the hood of his red and white DeSoto. He looked good in his blue jeans and tight white t-shirt. There was something in the way he rolled his pack of Lucky Strikes in his shirt sleeve that she found sexy.
One of the Lucky's was hanging from his lips as she skipped across the lawn.
"Hey, good lookin", whatcha got cookin'?" he said as he flicked the cigarette butt at the storm drain next to the driveway. It went straight in.
Peggy kissed him, and he opened the passenger door for her. She got in and slid to the center of the seat. Johnny came around and got behind the wheel. He started the engine, then draped his arm over her shoulders as he pulled away from the curb. Connie Francis was on the radio, singing
Lipstick On Your Collar.
Route 37 was crowded with cruising cars, as it usually was on summer Saturday night. It seemed like music was coming from the open windows of every car; Paul Anka and Elvis, Bobby Darin and Sam Cooke, the Drifters and the Coasters and the Platters. Peggy wondered how many balmy evenings she had spent with her friends, endlessly making the loop from Veteran's Park to Hamburger Haven. It seemed sort of juvenile now, but there wasn't much else to do. When they passed the Dairy Queen, she remembered all the nights she had gone there last summer with Bobby. If she had said yes when he called, they might be sitting at one of the picnic tables together right now. She felt a twinge of guilt at the thought, and leaned closer against Johnny.
Traffic was backed up turning into Hamburger Haven. While they inched forward, Johnny put his hand on Peggy's knee. She looked at him and rolled her eyes, but did not object. He slid his hand up the inside of her thigh, pushing the hem of her skirt with it. She grabbed his wrist just a few inches short of his goal.
"What's the hurry, mister?" she asked him.
"I can't help it if you're irresistible, baby."
"Just drive for now, Romeo." She gestured with her head, "You're holding up traffic."
Johnny looked up and saw that the way was clear. He turned into the parking lot and found a space. A car hop skated over and they ordered milkshakes, chocolate for Johnny, strawberry for Peggy. Just as their order arrived, the back door opened and Bill Wilson and Millie Johnson squeezed into the back seat.
"You guys going to the drive in?" Bill asked.
"Natch," Johnny said, "Like, where else would we go?"
"There's always the lake."