Billy Tobias is a scarecrow of a 12-year old boy, with lank blond hair that's always in his eyes. Freckles dot his pale but clear adolescent face, and he has that can't-quite-put-my-finger-on-it type of cuteness that doesn't go unnoticed by the blossoming Marys and Jills and Shirleys of the neighborhood that the Vincents inhabit. He possesses a keenness of spirit that transcends his chronological age. That attribute, in its turn, does not go unnoticed by his teachers, his friend's parents and much older but far less astute grownups.
It's been a wild game of dodge ball this early evening, played in the middle of quiet, tree-lined Hernandez Terrace. The occasional automobile cuts through the frenzied game, momentarily putting the rag-tag band of urchins on the sidelines. Effie Watson hums by in her '51 Nash Statesman Custom, Rose Packard motors through, from the opposing direction, in majestic elegance, enthroned high upon reversible cushions, in her rose '56 Packard 400. George Spalding has returned from a long, tiring day at the tax bureau, pulling his green '54 Chevy sedan stodgily into the carport.
It grows darker, the sweaty band of dodgers/throwers breaks up, and pesky but adorable Sally Anne Tobias pouts her bruised way home to 236 Hernandez Terrace. She wanted to play (Billy begrudgingly gave in), and it seems she was the ball's principal target. A conspiracy of sorts? Sally dashes up treads and risers of New York style carpeting to her frilly bedroom. Once plopped firmly and unmovable upon her four-poster, she pours out her heart to a little girl's one true confidante: Raggedy Ann.
Billy stays behind as his pals go their separate ways, home to scrubbing up and supper. "Bobby, come and get your supper" is routinely wailed out each evening through a battered screen door by Maggie Reese, beckoning her only child to come home and put some more meat on his stout bones. Mrs. Tobias hasn't returned home yet to fix the family dinner; she's chairing this or that committee to raise funds for this or that worthy cause du jour. Sally falls asleep, exhausted but secretly overjoyed that this time her creepy big brother relented and let her play, even if she is bruised and battered. Raggedy Ann keeps a button-eye on the alert for interlopers.
The young man Tobias drops to the grass in the only empty lot on the block. It is a plum orchard, a very well tended plum orchard, owned by cranky old man Peters, whose home fronts the next street over, Wraight Street. Though clearly a jock in the making - kick-the-can- kicker-into-the-middle-of-next-year pro, expert dodger of the meanest kickball in town, and slugger par excellence of a routine softball - Billy is deeper on the inside than the simple and commonplace boyish bravado that the outside would suggest. Lying serenely and strangely camouflaged in a high but maintained carpet of green, Billy, lying on his belly, chin cupped upon his thumbs, and fingers interlaced like the proverbial church of human digits, looks intently across the asphalt toward 248.
He's thinking about his best pal, whom he doesn't see outside as often as he would like. As they both would like. The two boys formed a bond instantly when the Tobiases moved in down the street some 8 years earlier and the boys looked upon each other for the first time. They continue to look at each other, and at this moment they are looking at each other ...
Separated only by a pane of glass.