“No kicks,” Sam said. He took a copy of the
Sporting News
.
“How does your father l-like his new life?”
“Okay, I guess.”
“He did the smart thing,” Milt said. Milt handed Sam his change and brought his lips to Sam's ear. “Be careful,” he whispered. “B-be careful. The word is out.”
“I appreciate your interest,” Sam said. He thought Milt's eyes, behind the thick glasses, were wet. It might, however, have been the cold. It really got him, though, the way people were watching out for him. But when it came time to put up or shut up, where would they be then? Sam walked away. What mattered was knowing who you could depend on in the clutch, and thereâit moved himâSam knew he could still put Dutch at the top of the list. Even if they didn't see one another for monthsâfor yearsâSam knew that Dutch was a friend he could always count on, no matter where, no matter when, and no questions asked.
In the clutch, count on Dutch. Sam walked along Flatbush Avenue. He'd do what he planned to do. It would be nice to sit around Stella's place and have her talk to him, to eat something with her. If she didn't have anything ready, they could send out for pizza. He sighed. In truth, he admitted, if he'd had the money he'd have handed it over to Willie. But he couldn't give what he didn't have. Maybe he'd go see Stallworth and put the touch on himâa guy who'd been given back his life could afford to be generous to others.
The thing was, he told himself, entering Stella's building on Clarkson Avenue, he could understand what Tidewater had feltâhe could imagine himself in the man's place, having finished most of his life and missing old friends: guys you'd done things with, guys whom you'd lost, for one reason or another, along the way. Sam could understand the man in that part of him because, like him, he too became angry at the idea that people had, in the course of their lives, to become separated from one another, while at the same timeâmore like Tidewater than he would ever acknowledgeâhe wanted most of all to be alone, and to be left alone. That he wanted both things at once had never seemed a contradiction: in his line of work, and living with Ben the way he had, he figured he'd had the best of both. And yet, even while Ben had been there, Sam had known that he'd longed more for each extremeâto be by himself, and to be with someone elseâand he'd wondered about himself sometimes.
He pressed the bell to Stella's apartment. The intercom clicked on. “Hello?”
“It's Sam the Gambler,” he said.
“Hey, Sam the Gamblerâcome on upâ”
The door buzzed, allowing Sam to enter the lobby. He heard his heart thump, under his mackinaw. His skin was dry. He didn't think about it muchâhis desire to be with others. Mostly, he took things as they came, as he always had. But with all the stuff they'd been throwing at him latelyâTidewater and Sabatini and Flo and Dutchâit was, he knew, normal to want to get rid of a lot of it, to want some peace. That was why, he told himself as the elevator rose, he'd done the smart thing in coming to Stella's. He felt comfortable when he was there, and that was enough. Let the cards fallâ¦
“Come on inâ” she called, after he had knocked. “It's open. I was expecting company.”
Sam entered, walked down the corridor. “Who?” he asked.
“You, Sam.”
“Sure,” he said, and took his coat off, hung it in the hallway closet, then walked into the living room.
Stella was out of her wheelchair, sitting in one corner of her couch, her feet tucked under her. “How's tricks, Ace?” she asked, and smiled at him.
His head bobbed up and down. “I can't kick,” he said. “It's cold. I've been out walking.”
“To get here,” Stella said. She swung her neck slightly, so that her hair flipped back, away from her eyes. She was, Sam told himself, as pretty a girl as he had thought on the first night he'd seen her; her smile made him smile. Her hands were in her lap, and he wondered if she'd put them there for his benefitâso that she'd look moreâ¦normal was the word, he supposed. She wore a soft sweaterâa pale violet colorâand a black skirt. Sam smelled something sweet. “You can sit next to me,” she said. “Take a load off your mind.”
“You're sharp,” he said. “You must've eaten already.” Sam laughed and sat.
“No. I was waiting for you. I told you.” She lowered her voice. “You're my company.”
“Come on,” he said. “Leave off.” He let his head fall back against the couch, and closed his eyes. “I've had a rough dayâI'm not up to riddles and things.”
“I didn't eat yet,” she said. “You can eat with me, okay?”
“Sure,” he said. “Or we could send out for pizza.”
“No,” she said. “I've got something in the works.”
Sam blinked. “Sure,” he said again, then realized that she'd been mimicking him, and he laughed.
“You can sit closer to me,” Stella said. “Don't be afraid. I mean, let's face it, with a girl like me a guy is safe, right?” Sam slid closer to her, along the couch. “Put your feet up,” she said. “You'll feel better. On the chair.”
Sam lifted his feet and rested them on the seat of Stella's wheelchair. He knew the wheels were locked so that it wouldn't roll away. The room was smaller than his own, but slightly larger, he noted, than Tidewater's. Stella worked in the other room, where she slept. “I went to see Tidewater, in his place,” Sam stated. He felt Stella's shoulder against his own. Her hands stayed in her lap.
“So?”
“That's all,” Sam said. “I was just making conversation.”
“Listen,” Stella said. “You be careful around him.”
“Why?”
“I don't know,” she said. “His eyes, I suppose. I don't like the guy's eyes, if you want the truth.”
“I'm hungry,” Sam said. “I don't want to rush you, I meanâbut maybe I could do something, since you're sitting here alreadyâ”
“Don't rush me then,” Stella said. She moved her head so that it rested on Sam's shoulder. Her voice became soft. “Please?” Sam tensed momentarily, glanced at her, then felt things ease. He nodded, and watched her lips part, as she smiled. “I mean, you'll feel better if you just sit for a while. Take my word for it, okay? You move around too much, if you ask me. You need to take it slow.”
“I saw Willie the Lump, on the way here.”
“No wonder,” Stella said, and closed her eyes. “Didn't I tell you? Didn't I just say it? Tidewater and Willie and me, all in the same dayâyou move around too much. You want your life to go slower, Sam. Please? I mean, where's it all get you in the end, right? That's what I want to know.”
Sam laughed, andâas if it were the most natural thing in the worldâhe put his right arm around her shoulder and pressed her to himself, affectionately. It was the line she used that always made him laughâloosen upâand they both knew it. “You left out FloâI saw her too,” he said.
“See what I mean?” she said. “I'll tell you somethingâyou did the right thing, coming here.” She blew through her lips, as if exhausted. “Willie the LumpâChrist! Why don't you lay off?”
“I suppose,” Sam said. “Where's it get me in the end, right?”
One hand fell from her lap, against his thigh. “I think I need some help,” she said, glancing at her hand. Sam took her hand in his, held it briefly, then placed it back in her lap.
“At least my old man lays offâhe hasn't called yet. I give him credit there.”
“Andâ?”
“Nothing. He knows there's nothing to say.”
“You have nice eyes, did I tell you that?”
“The first time we met,” Sam said, and he laughed again. “But Dutch, my buddy, is better-looking. He has those deep eyesâmaybe an inch into his faceâ”
“But he's not here, is he?”
“No.”
“Soâ?”
“You're okay, Stella,” Sam said. “I meanâtwo things you said to me already, in just a few minutesâto be careful, and not to be afraidâthe same jazz everybody else is giving me these days, butâ” He stopped.
“But what?”
He shrugged. “I don't know,” he said. “I'll tell you the truth, I feel better already, just sitting here, away from things, if you know what I mean.”
“Sure,” Stella said. “You take things too hard, is your trouble. You just close your eyes and relax. Dream about something nice while I fix supper.” She sat up, straight. Sam watched her breasts move under her sweater. If you had just come into the room, he realized, and the wheelchair hadn't been there, you never would have thought anything. He liked that: the fact that, in all ways, when she was sitting still, she appeared to be normal, so that he didn't have to think muchâwhen he was with herâabout what it would be like to have had her life. “Don't take things so hard, okay, Ace? Listen to yourselfâhang loose a little. Let the bastards sweat.”
Sam nodded. “You need some help?” he asked.
“I told you before,” she said. “Don't be polite around me, okay?” Sam got up, moved the wheelchair to the side, and did as she had taught him to do: he moved her legs so that they hung down, just above the silver footholds at the bottom of the wheelchair; then he squatted and crossed his arms in front of him, his forearms toward her, as if he were going to throw a block in football. She put her hands on his forearms and found her strength there, lifting herself from the couch by pressing down on Sam's arms and, at the same timeâshe'd done it a thousand and one times before, she'd told himâshe stepped onto the metal footholds, shifted, and let her body down into the seat. “See you later,” she said, and wheeled away, around the couch to where the kitchenette was. “You take it easy. Put your feet up on the couch, or pull over the hassock. We want you to feel at home here, right?”
“Right,” he said, and sat down. He took off his shoes, then put his feet up, over one arm of the couch, his head on two embroidered throw pillows. He didn't have to watch her work around the kitchenâeverything was arranged for her. She could, in her own words, really wheel and deal there. Sam closed his eyes, heard Stella humming, and tried to think of nothing. He felt good.
There was no mystery to it reallyâto why he should feel so good when he was in Stella's place, to why he felt so peaceful when she bantered with him and teased him. It had to do with what he'd been thinking about on the way to her place. There was no point in denying the truth about his feelings: since she was who she was, he supposed that in one part of him he agreed with the rest of the worldâhe allowed himself to believe that she didn't count some how as a real person. Sure. That was why he could feel as if he had it both ways when he was with her: he was with somebody, and he wasn't. It clicked into place and his eyes snapped open, seeing what he'd been thinking.
“I think I'm taking you for a ride,” he said.
“You don't have a car.”
“You know what I mean.”
“Forget it,” Stella said. “I figure your intentions are as honorable as the next guy's. At least. The odds are pretty good on you, if you want the truth. I've been around.”
“Sure,” Sam said. “I'm an ace.”
“Lie down and rest. I told youâyou take things too hard. Don't be so serious your whole life.” She appeared in front of him, in her wheelchair. “I meanâcome onâlook at meâyou've got to enjoy yourself, Sam, right? Come onâlook at me, damn it.”
Sam looked up. “Maybe I should leave you alone,” he said.
“You do what you want,” Stella said. “But mostly, if you come, don't mope, okay? Enjoy yourself. Christ! Don't they allow us that anymore? If you know what I mean.”
“Okay,” Sam said.
“Believe me, I don't give away any more than I get.” Stella leaned forward in her chair. Her hands were on the armrests. “I've learned that much. You want me to put it in black and white? With me, Sam the Gambler, your account is even up, right? Oh Christâ” She was angry. “If I could, I'd shake your goddamned shouldersâ” She breathed out, relaxed. “I would if I could, so consider yourself shaken. You burn me sometimes. It's really crazy, you wanting words all of a sudden.” She pushed off, her hands on the chrome rims inside the wheels. “What for, Sam?”
Sam lay back down and closed his eyes. He did not, he knew, feel as if he were both there and not there. He knew where he wasâbut the other fact remained true. He felt that both extremes met: he had, somehow, as much privacy as he wantedâand he had as muchâ¦companionship was the word he found. Stella was right, he knew, though he followed her instructions and said nothing. He was pushing too hard, not listening to himself when he should, listening too closely when he had no reason to. If it was true that he did, in one part of him, think of her as being apart from other peopleâfrom girlsâit was also true that, when he was with her and when he thought about her, she seemed more real than other people. He'd been too quick before, trying to pigeonhole things, trying to find a theory that would tie things together. Since when had Sam Berman ever believed in theories? To want to put an end to it all by saying that he felt as if he were with her and not with her, that she was there and not there, more real and less real⦠Sam shook his head, his eyes closed, seeing nothing: there was, he concluded, more to it than that.
They ate together at the kitchen tableâStella had made steak, french fries, and green beansâand Sam was still as hungry as he had been in Garfield's. Cold weather did that to his appetite. He did his exercises, though, morning and evening: he stayed in shape. Stella didn't press him about any of the things he'd thrown out: not about Tidewater or Willie or Ben or Flo. She talked about her own mother, who'd been trying to visit her more frequently, who'd been after her to get out more. “She wants me to meet other young people,” Stella said. “How old are you, Sam?” Sam cleared the table when they'd finished the main dish, and he got dessert for themâice creamâfrom the freezer. Stella wheeled away and turned on her hi-fi, then returned. Sam served the ice cream and knew that they were both rememberingâlistening to the musicâwhat she'd said to him on the first night they'd met, about dancing. He thought of telling her that he didn't like to dance, which was true, but he knew how she would have treated a comment like that, so he said nothing. She said something about the work her mother was doing for the muscular dystrophy organizationâand then, getting no response, she apologized for talking so much about her mother. “I think she likes me the way I am,” Stella said. “But that's okay. It makes people think she's noble, having a daughter like me. The hours she puts in, carrying around a damned canisterâI mean, she doesn't actually carry it all the time, but it's as if she does, as if it's a permanent part of her hand. You want to see a picture I did of her? It's in the other room, on the desk. Forget it.” She spoke without pausing.