The Three-Day Affair (2 page)

Read The Three-Day Affair Online

Authors: Michael Kardos

Tomorrow we’d warm up with the easier course, one with wide fairways and few hazards. Then on Sunday we’d play the top-rated public course in the state, a heavily wooded eighteen holes in a secluded valley, where supposedly it was common to spot eagles overhead.

“You can’t imagine how much I’ve been looking forward to this,” Nolan said, when I described the courses to him. “
Campaigning
can wear you down.”

“I remember,” I said.

“Nah, that was only a statewide election,” he said. “This is a whole different ball game.”

I’d wondered whether Nolan would have time for us this year. But when I’d e-mailed him a few weeks earlier, asking if he was sure his campaign could do without him for a weekend, he fired back a philosophical reply:
If I can’t take a weekend off to see my
closest
friends, then what the hell is it all for?

The train arrived and spat out dozens of businessmen and women, well dressed but rumpled in the aftershock of their
work-week
. Jeffrey teetered off the train, suitcase in one hand, golf bag in the other. Seeing us standing by my car, he set the suitcase on the ground and waved. We went over to greet him.

“I didn’t see Evan on the train,” Jeffrey said by way of greeting. He’d boarded at Newark Airport. Evan was supposed to have boarded the same train earlier in New York.

Just then my cell phone rang, cutting the mystery short.

“Don’t even try to imagine all the fucking work that got dumped on me today,” Evan said into my ear.

He was a year away from making partner at his law firm. The way he explained it, to make partner at a major New York firm you couldn’t simply work eighty-hour weeks. You had to work eighty-hour weeks and ask for more.

When I got off the phone, Nolan and Jeffrey were both
looking
incredulous. I confirmed their suspicions. “He’s tied up.”

“Tied up?” Jeffrey said. “What the hell does that mean?”

I shrugged. “Lawyer stuff.”

“Oh, for Pete’s sake,” Nolan said. “Jeffrey made it.
I
made it….”

“He said he’ll be here tomorrow morning,” I told them. “He
promised to be on the first train.” I picked up Jeffrey’s golf bag and headed to the car. “Come on—you guys must be starving.”

They were. We decided on an early dinner. Afterward, we’d go to the golf range and hit practice balls. Then we’d head back to the house for a drink on the porch.

“I bought a bottle of Scotch and some cigars,” I said as I
lowered
Jeffrey’s luggage into the trunk.

“None for me,” Jeffrey said. I figured, given how drunk he’d obviously been last weekend, that he meant the Scotch, until he added, “I’ve quit smoking.”

“So have I,” I said. “Cigarettes, anyway.” It’d been a month since my last cigarette. Not easy considering where I worked—where there was no ventilation and the carpet reeked so badly it seemed to have been woven
from
smoke. “But I’ve got a baby coming. What’s your excuse?”

“Same as yours,” he said. We looked at him, confused. “Sara’s pregnant.”

“Well, I’ll be damned,” Nolan said.

Jeffrey and Sara had been married for eight years with no children.

“Congrats, man,” I said. “That’s terrific news.”

“Yeah, I guess so,” he said listlessly, and I couldn’t help
wondering
just what the hell he wasn’t telling.

Antonello’s was a favorite restaurant of Cynthia’s and mine for special occasions. I returned from the restroom to find antipasto on the table and Nolan engaged in a full-on sales pitch.

“I told Will it sounded like a great idea,” he was saying to Jeffrey, “and that he should count me in for twenty. So what about you?”

I sat down, torn between interrupting the conversation and hearing what Jeffrey had to say. He shrugged. “I’ll have to think it over.”

“Forget it,” I said. “We can talk about this some other time.” Then, to Nolan: “I’d rather hear about your campaign.”

“Think what over?” Nolan said. “Come on, we’re talking about a twenty-grand investment. It’s a no-brainer.”

“Look, guys,” I said, “I don’t want anyone feeling pressure over this.”

I wondered, though, if I was being completely honest. Jeffrey lived two blocks from San Francisco Bay. He had joined an
Internet
start-up at the beginning of the boom. When the company went public, it took him five beers over dinner to admit to us that his stake in the company was “hovering around thirty million
dollars
.” This was at another of our golf weekends, in Palm Springs, and I remember him trembling when he told us. He could have been confessing a crime. He had just turned twenty-five.

I’d been staggered. Playing the drums was earning me fifteen thousand dollars a year. The trip to Palm Springs was costing me close to a month’s pay.

There were a few follow-up questions, but soon enough
conversation
returned to the old standbys: stories from college,
highlights
from the day’s round. The fact of a twenty-foot putt was more real to us than thirty million dollars. After dinner we played low-stakes poker long into the night and finished off a case of beer. We were laughing again. A lightness to the evening had
settled
in. By morning, I’d done my best to put Jeffrey’s wealth out of my mind. I think everyone had. We never talked about it again.

I hadn’t planned to ask anyone other than Nolan for money this weekend. But now that the matter was on the table, I couldn’t help weighing Jeffrey’s enormous wealth against the relatively small investment Nolan was asking him to make. Okay, so Jeffrey was feeling a little gloomy lately. But still. If our situations had been reversed, I liked to think I would’ve opened my checkbook without any hesitation.

“But this is a solid plan.” Nolan dipped a corner of bread in a plate of olive oil and used it to point at Jeffrey while he talked. “It’s solid, and Will needs for this to happen. You’re not even going to help him get it off the ground?”

“The music business is risky,” Jeffrey said.

“So take a risk.” Nolan tilted his head, as if just noticing
something
. “You seem really down. Are you down?”

Jeffrey smiled. “Good work, detective.”

“Okay, so tell us what the fuck’s the matter.”

I had planned to share a golf cart tomorrow with Jeffrey, see if he felt like talking. Nolan was always a little more direct.

“Oh, a lot of things.” He took a sip of water. “I don’t mean to be mysterious. I just don’t feel like getting into it now.”

“You’re in a rut, aren’t you?” When Jeffrey didn’t respond right away, he said, “Of course you are. You just turned thirty, you’ve got a baby coming, and you’re looking at the rest of your long, boring life and freaking out. Am I right?”

“I guess it’s something like that,” Jeffrey said, though his face was uncharacteristically hard to read.

“Piece of cake,” Nolan said. “Know what you need to do?”

“I give up.”

“Do something unexpected. Surprise yourself. That’s why guys are always skydiving and swimming the English Channel and shit. You need a shock to the system, something to remind yourself that you’re alive.” He poured himself some more wine. “And for starters, you can become a record company executive.”

“Or,” I cut in, “we can table the whole discussion about
making
records until later.” The waiter was setting a vast tray of food on a stand beside our table. “How about we just eat until we can’t move. How does that sound?”

Jeffrey managed a smile. “I think I can do that.”

Nolan laughed suddenly.

“What?” I asked.

“There’s a girl over there”—he nodded somewhere behind me—“who looks just like that fifteen-year-old you asked out at the Quakerbridge Mall. You remember?”

“Fuck off,” I said, not bothering to glance over my shoulder. “She looked a lot older. And she said she went to Trenton State.”

“Yeah, and with her mother right there, overhearing the whole thing.”

Jeffrey glanced over at the girl. He shook his head, then refilled his wine as Nolan and I recounted this anecdote we all already knew, one of the many we told and retold over the years.

When we stopped speaking, Jeffrey took a sip of wine. “So, Will, have you thought of a name?”

I explained that Cynthia and I had decided ahead of time not to find out the sex of the baby. “So our list is getting pretty long.”

“No, I mean a name for the record company.”

“Oh.” I smiled, having decided this long ago. “Long-Shot Records.”

“Good name.” The combination of wine and shared
memories
seemed to relax him. His face warmed. It was good to see. His moods could be as erratic as his golf game. Some days he had the touch of a pro, and other days he’d psych himself out and miss every three-foot putt. You never knew exactly which Jeffrey you were going to get. “All right,” he said at last. “I surrender. Count me in for twenty grand.”

“Glad to hear it.” Nolan smiled, but then his smile faded away. “Seriously, though—do something bold. Surprise yourself. And for God’s sake, don’t buy a sports car.”

Sometimes Cynthia asked me what we talked about when we got together and played our rounds of golf. She must have
imagined
us on the course baring our souls, the game primarily an
occasion for the talk of old friends. But it wasn’t that way. We talked, but mostly we golfed. Conversation tended to center around the previous shot, the next hole. Which club to use, which way the green might break. At night, over steaks, we’d reminisce. We had a deep well of stories from which to draw. But weightier conversation felt almost like an intrusion, business to be gotten through.

And yet tonight, as I ate my chicken cacciatore and drank my wine, I was thinking that even long-standing friendships required periodic injections of the now. At one time, we had all taken classes together and lived in the same dormitories, drunk from the same kegs and vomited on the same lawns. Our lives were led in close proximity, and we knew one another as only friends living together do. And while we liked to believe that our shared past was the anchor from which we could drift only so far, the truth was that each of us had changed. Maybe even a lot. And this should have been cause for celebration. It meant that we’d grown up. But to acknowledge this, to announce, “Look at me! Look who I’ve become!” would have been to disappoint everyone
somehow
, to destroy the illusion that we knew one another as well now as we once did.

The funny thing was, Cynthia wouldn’t have liked me when I was twenty. Twenty-year-old Will was too raw, too desperate for everything: love, success, and confirmation that all his choices were the right ones. Probably we were all a little wiser now, a little more complicated. All of which is to say, I felt grateful for our new business partnership. Our friendships were secure to the
degree
that we all trusted in the past’s strong anchor. But here,
finally
, was something new to bind us together, something in the present that had us looking to the future.

I proposed a toast.

“To what?” Jeffrey asked.

“To your fat pregnant wives,” Nolan said. “And to Will’s new business.”

I raised my glass. “To old friends.”

Leaving the restaurant, full from dinner, I thought about the phone call I’d make on Monday to Fred McPhee, my ex-bandmate, offering his new band a record contract. I loved knowing that I could help him reach a level of success that we—High Noon—might have had, if it hadn’t been for Gwen’s death. And for a
moment
, I could imagine it was all already happening: the record was made, rave reviews were being published. Songs I’d recorded and Cynthia had promoted were being bought and reviewed and downloaded and talked about.

And maybe—to continue the fantasy—we’d make enough money where, after some time, Cynthia and I could buy a home after all, a slightly larger place where we would raise our child.

Nolan asked me if I planned to give Cynthia the news about Long-Shot Records on the phone tonight or surprise her with it on Sunday. But this was no decision at all: I would tell her as soon as I heard her voice.

Looking back, I’m glad I allowed myself that fantasy. Glad to have indulged in that much hope—because within the hour,
everything
would change.

It started at the golf range, where the three of us stood on
adjacent
AstroTurf mats, driving our golf balls into the dark, misty field. Despite the earlier sun, it’d begun to drizzle, and thunder rumbled in the distance as we settled into the rhythm of our swings. After hitting a dozen or so balls, I happened to glance up at Jeffrey, who was standing to my left. I’m a lefty, and Jeffrey’s a righty, so we were facing each other. He stood over his ball as if he were about to take a swing. But the backswing didn’t come. He
just stood there, head down, holding the club. At some point he must have sensed me watching him, because he looked up.

“Hey, Will?” he said quietly.

I raised my eyebrows in response.

More silence. Then, in the careful voice of a physician making a grave diagnosis, he said, “She’s cheating on me again.”

Before I could think of a suitable reply, he looked down, brought his club back, and swung. The ball went so high that I lost it in the grayness overhead. To my eyes, never good at
twilight
, it simply shrank into the sky and was gone.

On the drive home, Jeffrey was being very quiet. But as we
approached
the little shopping center across from the entrance to my neighborhood, he said, “Pull in there.” He wanted to buy
antacids
at the Milk-n-Bread. “My stomach’s been killing me lately. Stress.”

“Stress?” Nolan said. “It was the clams.”

In a few hours Newfield would be placid again, but at 7:15 the Friday rush was still in full swing and traffic in the westbound lane was bumper to bumper. “For real?” I asked.

“Trust me—you need to stop.”

I put on my left blinker and, seeing a small opening in front of an SUV, raced across the lane of cars. I pulled into a parking space and Jeffrey got out.

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