Not that I made any new friends.
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The notion of a midweek poker game had lost all its appeal.
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There was work and my family and little else.
Then one sunny Indian summer afternoon, Neil called and said, “Maybe we should get together again.”
“Maybe.”
“It's over, Aaron.
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It really is.”
“I know.”
“Will you at least think about it?”
I felt embarrassed.
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“Oh, hell, Neil.
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Is that swimming pool of yours open Saturday afternoon?”
“As a matter of fact, it is.
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And as a matter of fact, Sarah and the girls are going to be gone to a fashion show at the club.”
“Perfect.
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We'll have a couple of beers.”
”You know how to swim?”
“No,” I said, laughing.
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“And from what Sarah says, you don't, either.”
I
got there about three, pulled into the drive, walked to the back where the gate in the wooden fence led to the swimming pool.
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It was eighty degrees and even from here I could smell the chlorine.
I opened the gate and went inside and saw him right away.
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The funny thing was, I didn't have much of a reaction at all.
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I just watched him.
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He was floating.
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Face down.
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He looked pale in his red trunks.
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This, like the others, would be judged an accidental death.
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Of that I had no doubt at all.
I used the cellular phone in my car to call 911.
I didn't want Sarah and the girls coming back to see an ambulance and police cars in the drive and them not knowing what was going on.
I called the club and had her paged.
I told her what I'd found.
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I let her cry.
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I didn't know what to say.
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I never do.
In the distance, I could hear the ambulance working its way toward the Neil Solomon residence.
I was just about to get out of the car when my cellular phone rang.
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I picked up.
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“Hello?”
“There were three of us that night at your house, Mr. Bellini.
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You killed two of us.
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I recovered from when your friend stabbed me, remember?
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Now I'm ready for action.
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I really am, Mr. Bellini.”
Then the emergency people were there, and neighbors, too, and then wan, trembling Sarah.
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I just let her cry some more.
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Gave her whiskey and let her cry.
H
e knows how to do it, whoever he is.
He lets a long time go between late-night calls.
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He lets me start to think that maybe he changed his mind and left town.
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And then he calls.
Oh, yes, he knows just how to play this little game.
He never says anything, of course.
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He doesn't need to.
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He just listens.
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And then hangs up.
I've considered going to the police, of course, but it's way too late for that.
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Way too late.
Or I could ask Jan and the kids to move away to a different city with me.
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But he knows who I am and he'd find me again.
So all I can do is wait and hope that I get lucky, the way Neil and I got lucky the night we killed the second of them.
T
onight I can't sleep.
It's after midnight.
Jan and I wrapped presents until well after eleven.
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She asked me again if anything was wrong.
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We don't make love as much as we used to, she said; and then there are the nightmares.
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Please tell me if something's wrong. Aaron.
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Please.
I stand at the window watching the snow come down.
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Soft and beautiful snow.
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In the morning, a Saturday, the kids will make a snowman and then go sledding and then have themselves a good old-fashioned snowball fight, which invariably means that one of them will come rushing in at some point and accuse the other of some terrible misdeed.
I see all this from the attic window.
Then I turn back and look around the poker table.
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Four empty chairs.
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Three of them belong to dead men.
I look at the empty chairs and think back to summer.
I look at the empty chairs and wait for the phone to ring.
I wait for the phone to ring.