Authors: Norman Bogner
“Will you keep me in mind for a scout job?”
Â
“I will, âcourse. But whut about you business heah?”
Â
“It runs itself. Just an income. Listen, we won't hassle over money. Doin' what you want is the most important thing.”
Â
Â
* * * *
Â
He arrived at the apartment in a state of helpless euphoria, as close to hysteria as he'd ever been. Too excited to speak, give vent to the cloudy dreams swirling through his mind, he stalked from room to room as though searching for a key to a door he couldn't find, behind which lay the mystery of existence. Jane wanted to turn him on, simply to calm him, but he batted the joint out of her hand.
Â
“Got to keep my head clear,” he said, then looked quizzically at her. A man who'd run sixty-seven laps around Gramercy Park would hardly require it. If
he
wasn't turned on, who was?
Â
“What is it, Sonny?”
Â
“I got my future ridin' on a man, a friend. Somebody I can trust.” He was so happy, so filled with the pure contemplation of his dream, that he wanted to cry. “There are some people walkin' around who believe in me, Jane. Isn't that wonderful? Unbelievable? I've got a chance. I need this like a pint of blood. Once and for all I'll be able to show everybody who I am. Wesley Jackson ... born Tallahassee, Florida, 1937; All-American at Florida Tech; halfback for Birmingham Colonials 1962-1966; leading ground gainer 1964; rushed over a thousand yards in two seasons; average carry 4.9 yards ... has accepted the positionâno, postâas chief scout for the Birmingham Colonials, it was announced today by Mr. H. E. (Pudge) Denison, owner of the Colonials.”
Â
“Is it true?”
Â
“We have to come to terms, naturally, but you can expect to read about it in the New York
Times
sometime next week. You can bank on it. Now I know why I was readin' that paper all night lookin' for my name. Christ, I found it, too.”
Â
She wanted to continue talking, exploring the possibilities. Visiting high schools in Lackawanna or Duluth every Saturday afternoon (to spot and report on what, if anything, had been spotted) didn't exactly capture her imagination. She had envisaged other more alluring side effects: roasting their backs in Positano at a cliff hotel; eating sandwiches of chorizo in the Plaza del Toros of Madrid: pedaling together over soft waves at the Lido; film festivals and making loveânot entirely contemptible activities. Instead she saw herself wearing three pairs of knee-high woolen socks, requiring boots of a larger size, draped in a serpentine of scarves, a parka concealing all of her natural goodies, on a permanent pigskin parade. He spoke lyrically of Green Bay and she remembered its reputation for snow and chilblains, good for iron maidens from Iowa, maybe. But who could eat winter corn raw, even if it did keep teeth white? Hers were white enough.
Â
He tapped a copy of Jerry Kramer's
Instant Replay
, like a representative from the Gideon Society warning a conventioneer that there were other things to do at a Hilton apart from drunkenly smashing glasses and banging broads. This is the word, thine is power, he seemed to be saying. She had never responded positively to chastisement.
Â
“Look, Sonny, you haven't the job yet.”
Â
“I'm not gonna spend the rest of my life walkin' on sawdust, smellin' beer and checkin' for drunks in the wash room. Sink overflowin' from them stickin' their wrists under the cold water....” He was breaking out:
obviously alone
, she thought,
if need be
. “Pudge won't let me down. Since I met you, Jane, things have been breakin' my way. This is on ice awready.”
Â
“What are you going to do with Junior?”
Â
“Private school. Like a military academy, or maybe not. Aunt Gloria ain't the best kinda company for a kid.”
Â
“But she makes great meat loaf.”
Â
“How'd you know that?”
Â
“Junior swears by it.”
Â
“Arguments I'm not gonna have with you.”
Â
“Why not?”
Â
“I don't argue with somebody I love.” Direct, honest, and final, he hit her between the eyes. She fell victim to his total simplicity. “I'll get expenses, too,” he added, demolishing all possibility of disagreement. “Could work it up $24.99 a day, when I'm travelin'.”
Â
“What made you pick 24.99?”
Â
“Under twenty-five, you don't havta account.”
Â
“Live and learn.”
Â
“You're still in school. What do you know about the business world?”
Â
Obviously nothing, so she bit her tongue, not without some effort. What did he know about the laws governing rationality, the architecture of the syllogism, the pantheon of logic in which the sorites is enshrined? In evasions he was as surefooted as ever, fleetly twisting on the off-tackle slant of reason. She wanted to tell him the truth, force him to face the fact that motels, motorways, and tooling second-hand Plymouths from one miserable town to another (and freezing his ass off on a stone slab while kids smashed each other's bones, snorting their words out for the rest of their lives because of unrepairable nose breaks) had little of the paradisal idyll he imagined.
Â
“One thing I've learned, Sonny, is that you can't educate other people. You break your heart trying, so I'm not going to.”
Â
“What kinda crack is that?” Munching Fig Newtons, he was irresistible. Her dozen-box purchase at the A&P had elicited a response from the usually sullen packer, who through his babble of Puerto Rican had asked if she were running an orhpanage. No, not an orphanage; just catering to Sonny's deepest needs, her child bed-companion with a sweet tooth, less harmful than hangups. He emptied the milk container, complaining about the wax that landed in the glass, and recalled softer days with mild bottles jingling, and running to the wagon from the vacant lot where he'd been since 5 a.m.: a kid throwing a ball through an old flat tire hung on a tree with the wire from a chicken coop, also abandoned when his father took to Sneaky Pete. He had developed great accuracy and could unload the ball remarkably fast, but glibness and signal calling were skills he would never acquire. His first coach at Tallahassee High had slotted him in as halfback after five minutes of the first quarter of his freshman debut, his self-esteem forever intact after his tear-assing young jack-rabbit made All-State from his sophomore year on, dying a happy man when his charge was later picked on three consecutive All-American teams at Florida Tech. Pitching through old tires made Sonny formidable on the halfback option play. Nothing had been wasted on him and yet everything
was
.
Â
“I want you to be happy, Sonny,” she said, given to futile concessions.
Â
“Happy? Is breathing air happy? No, you got to. Since I've been out of the game, I haven't been breathin', âcept maybe piss when I lug the ice block into the urinator. Come two a.m. you'd never know there was ice. It's all water. Same thing goes for me. Could anybody believe I was ever a man, somebody people respected, a person that got asked his opinion on things?”
Â
“It's that important?”
Â
He couldn't answer and simply stared at the wax bit floating on top of the milk, wondering if he'd at long last found a human being who could be accused of greater denseness than he himself.
Â
“Aw, Jane, come on, now”âhe made a small gesture with his handâ“it's my life.”
Â
Impossible to reason with, he batted down every argument she presented which contradicted his optimistic dreams and she saw the sinister outlines of ambition about to be realized. The incandescent glow in his eyes had not been placed there by her, she realized, but by his reckless fantasy, and it was dishonest because he denied it. No, nothing had changed except him, and she was still single-handedly running her society for wayward children who refused to acknowledge her existence.
Â
Â
* * * *
Â
They slept fitfully, together but with that separateness that emerges when passion becomes the answer to nothing. Conlon had not come in that night, and neither of them remarked on her absence. They were three free souls together, united in their liberty. He stirred early, unusual for him because of his hours, and put the coffee on. It was a day for anticipation, perhaps grief, impossible to sleep through. He made a call and she quietly picked up the extension and heard the metallic voice of the weather-bureau recording. Priming himself for future greatness, he wanted the elements on his side. He took out a brown gabardine business suit and a tan tie, brushing both meticulously. She'd never seen anyone brush a tie and thought of asking her mother, next time she saw her, if this was the sort of thing people in institutions might be expected to do. He dressed himself, fought a losing combat with his unruly, lawless curls, and sat down in the living room to wait. Dressed, and comprehensive, he had all the color and style of a Teamster business executive who'd been Jimmy Hoffa's last official appointment, concerned for his destiny lest new management oust him from his split-level.
Â
It was nine o'clock, and she throttled a small cry about to emerge from her throat. Gagging her mouth with the cup of her hand, she knew then that she'd never love any man as much, or him more, and it was then that he needed her least. The currency of small victories and big defeats were impossible for her to calculate.
People hardened, folded up, stopped smiling for the rest of their lives, drank more booze, lost hope, developed undefinable cruel streaks to prevent them from caring
, Jane thoughtâmaking a rough estimate of Sonny's situation, since there was no consumer's research of the soul to guide her, or enable her to gauge just what the man was going through. She was ready to lay down her life if he asked for it, but he didn't even want to talk to her. Had her inheritance been in her hands, she would have secured him the Colonials or any other team he wanted, put him in as president and let him while away his life on playing fields ...
and
without thinking twice about it. As his girlfriend, she had only unofficial status, a secure hold on his prick, and no answers, messages, or reprieves for his spiraling fate.
Â
At eleven-thirty the telephone rang, and when she picked it up, he shouted from the other room.
Â
“It's for me, Jane.” As if the caller was empowered to tell him where he could cash in his sweepstakes ticket....
Â
While she dressed he came in, reeling with delight, his eyes North-Star bright. She could wait for whatever news he was bringing, success had little relevance for her. He gave her a smile as broad as a crossbow. Optimism was not merely incurable but the pleasure of a peach. In the happiness race she had finished a distant second to football. That look, she'd always remember it: the open joy of the man informed that his first-born was safe, gorgeous, and nine pounds; that Mars had removed its blight from the seventh house; that the Internal Revenue had not been able to trace the numbered Swiss account. There were many causes for rejoicing, and Sonny's ebullience had combined them all. Not only had the insane two-buck flyer he took on a Canadian mining stock produced a mother lode, but also the 40-28-38 naked blond girl smiling out from the glossy magazine (her nipples gleaming, candlelit, waxy) had in his dream of dreams, while wrapping her legs around his earlobes, said: “Sonny, you're the greatest.” His optimism was not just eternal but a condition of the universe, as unchanging as the wink of the Little Dipper. She had never before known the possibility of employment to bring such helpless ecstasy to a man.
Â
“You've got the job?” she asked, out of courtesy.
Â
“Practically.”
Â
“What does that mean?” He wasn't, she hoped, to be denied.
Â
“Pudge asked me a favor. I couldn't refuse a friend.”
Â
Determined to let him go it alone, she turned her back, faced the mirror, and started working on her eyeline, one of the small concessions she made to makeup.
Â
“He needs a date. Big lunch at Leone's with the rest of the owners before they settle down to the draft. I need somebody who can talk it up for me.”
Â
“You need a car salesman.” She had second thoughts. “Conlon would probably go. Why don't you ask her?”
Â
“Lookit, Jane, even if she was willin' I wouldn't want her. You're the only one I could ask.”
Â
She turned around quickly, eyes wide open, glaring.
Â
“Sonny, this stinks. I don't like it at all.”
Â
“Jane, it's all bona-fided. What's wrong with lunch at Leone's? Food, I remember usta be great, and it never stops comin'. There wouldn't be any monkey business. Pudge'll be with all execs, an' he wants a high-class date with him.”
Â
“Ask Gloria. She owes you a favor, doesn't she?”
Â
“You got the wrong enda the stick. This ain't anythin' like that. He wants to be seen with an educated well-dressed girl. It'd help me if I had somebody out with him who had a high opinion of myself ... my abilities. I got to have somebody
close
for me.”
Â
“What's wrong with you? Either the man wants to give you a job or he doesn't and you're kidding yourself if you think I can do anything for you.”
Â
Subdued, he sank on the bed, his bag of persuaders depleted.
Â