The story
introduces us to Connie, a pretty but air-headed teenager who seems terribly
ordinary. She doesn't get along with her mom, she's annoyed by her sister, she
likes listening to music and watching movies, and she spends a lot of time
going out with her friends and meeting boys. Nothing too exciting going on
here, until…
In the
parking lot of the diner, Connie encounters a mysterious stranger. When Connie
first meets Arnold, she doesn't know who he is; he's just a creepy guy in a
parking lot who threatens her in a vague kind of way. But for some reason, she
can't help looking at him.
Later in
the summer, the mysterious stranger parks in her driveway and introduces
himself as Arnold Friend. Connie has completely forgotten about the creepy guy
until he shows up in her driveway when her family is out. Joined by a friend,
the stranger, who introduces himself as Arnold Friend, asks Connie to come with
him for a ride. At this point in the story, Connie is merely intrigued and even
amused by the stranger in her driveway, although she remains in her doorway.
Arnold
Friend insists that Connie join him for a ride, and threatens to harm her
family if she doesn't comply. When Connie finally realizes what a threat Arnold
is, she moves away from the doorway and asks him to leave. But Arnold threatens
to harm her family if she doesn't come with him.
Connie
races to the telephone but is so paralyzed with fear that she can't call the
police. When Connie races to the phone, it seems for a moment that there might
be a happy ending. But she breaks down and is unable to follow through on the
call.
Arnold
orders Connie to hang up the phone and join him in his car. Connie obeys. When
Connie obediently places the receiver back on the hook, it's clear that she has
come to accept her fate: she must join Arnold in order to save her family.
Connie
steps outside. When Connie finally crosses the threshold, the last image the
story gives us is Arnold Friend, surrounded by "vast sunlit reaches of
land." How we interpret this image determines how we read Connie's final
action, as either an act of self-sacrifice or a kind of defeat.
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