“The life of Don Sullivan in a nutshell. Don’t run off when you finish,” Ruth said, looking serious again.
“Everything all right?”
“Not really.” Ruth nodded in the direction of the closed kitchen door, which meant that whatever this was about, she didn’t want to discuss it in the field of Vince’s radar. Which worried Sully, since there wasn’t much Ruth wouldn’t discuss in front of Vince.
Sully’d eaten about half his linguine when Wirf came in, stood in the center of the room, pivoted on his prosthetic limb, and was about to leave when he spotted Sully off by himself in the dark, closed section of the restaurant. “What the hell are you doing back here?” he wanted to know as he slid uncertainly onto the bench, red-eyed. Wirf was about half in the bag, from the look of him.
“Trying to eat my dinner in peace for once,” Sully said.
Wirf nodded sympathetically, secure in his apparent belief that Sully’s observation in no way pertained to himself. He took off his gloves and scarf, put them next to the rubber plant on the ledge. “I saw you peek in at The Horse, but then you disappeared. I bet I been up and down this street half a dozen times trying to figure where you went.”
Sully twirled a forkful of linguine. “You should have given up, Wirf.”
“I was afraid you might be thinking black thoughts, after yesterday,” Wirf said. He was watching like an expectant dog as Sully raised the pasta to his mouth. Wirf, his brain permanently fogged by alcohol, forgot all sorts of things. Often he forgot to eat. Food seldom appealed to him except when he saw it actually being consumed. Then longing entered his expression, as if he’d suddenly recollected a lost love.
“Help me eat some of this,” Sully told him. The booth was set up for two and Ruth hadn’t bothered to clear away the other silver, so all Wirf needed was a plate. Since Sully had finished his salad, he pushed the bowl toward Wirf, who emptied the dregs of the oil and vinegar into the nearby rubber plant. With fork and spoon he transferred exactly half the remaining linguine into the bowl. “You ate all the clams?” he said, peering at the stack Sully’d made of the empty shells.
“I wasn’t expecting you, Wirf,” Sully said.
“All I wanted was one,” Wirf said. “I hate the slimy bastards, but I keep thinking I’ll be surprised someday and like them.”
“I’m glad there aren’t any left then. I like them every time I eat them,” Sully said, pushing the breadbasket toward Wirf.
“Don’t be stingy,” Wirf said, pointing his fork at Sully. “Don’t go through life stingy.”
“Okay,” Sully said.
“A clam’s a small thing,” Wirf explained. “But there’s a principle.”
“I could order you some clams,” Sully offered. He had no intention of doing that, but Wirf was easy to shame with gestures.
“This goddamn kitchen is closed!” Vince bellowed.
“Old radar ears,” Wirf said. “The government should put him on top of a mountain and make him listen to sounds from deep space.”
“That would be the place for him, all right,” Sully agreed.
Nothing from the kitchen. In a minute Ruth came by and set a clam in front of Wirf. It was uncooked and clamped tight.
“How can you put up with this untrustworthy son of a bitch?” Wirf asked her.
“Easy,” Ruth said. “I never see him.”
“So,” Wirf said when she was gone, “I’m hearing you went back to work.”
Sully pushed his plate toward the center of the table. “I didn’t do too bad either, you’ll be pleased to know. I enjoy it more than talking to judges.”
Wirf made a face. “Yesterday was no good,” he admitted, in reference to their most recent day in court, “but we’ll wear the bastards down. There’s a zillion things we haven’t even tried yet, and one of these days we’re going to get a judge who’s actually done an honest day’s work at some point in his worthless life. Then we’re home free.”
“By then I’ll be seventy and already dead for five years.”
“See,” Wirf pointed the fork again. “These are black thoughts. I thought we’d agreed you’d stay in school and wait this out. Be smart for once. Bide your time. They ever find out you’re working, and we’re really fucked.”
“That’s a black thought, Wirf,” Sully pointed out.
Wirf sighed, shook his head. “Why do I even try with you?”
“Now there’s a question. Go home and think about that.”
They were grinning at each other now. “Jesus,” Wirf said.
“Right,” Sully agreed.
“Carl paying you under the table?”
“You have to ask?”
“Just don’t go on the fucking books. Anywhere,” Wirf advised solemnly.
“listen. You don’t have to tell me to work under the table,” Sully reminded him. “The only time I ever worked on the up and up I got hurt.”
This was not literally true, but pretty near. One of Sully’s myriad financial headaches was that he’d done so little work on the books and paid so little FICA that his Social Security at retirement was going to be a drop in the bucket. His service pension was going to be the other drop. Which meant he’d be eligible for welfare and food stamps. The trouble with that was that he knew too many people on the public dole and he didn’t want to be one of them. You had to stand in too many lines and fill out too many forms, and Sully had a low opinion of both. He’d made up his mind in the army that if he ever lived through the war he’d never stand in another line. That was one of the reasons he’d returned to Bath, a town pretty much devoid of queues. Besides, welfare was begging, and he’d been saying for years that when the time came that he couldn’t be useful enough to earn what little he needed to live on he’d shoot himself, a promise two or three people he could think of would hold him to if they could.
“Work a little if you gotta, but remember our strategy,” Wirf was saying. “Keep ’em busy with paperwork, keep documenting the deterioration of that knee. Sooner or later they’ll see it’s costing them by not settling one or two of these claims. The court’s already starting to get pissed. You hear the judge yesterday?”
“He sounded pissed at you, Wirf.”
“Only ’cause he knows I won’t go away,” Wirf explained.
“I know how he feels,” Sully said.
Wirf didn’t rise to the bait. He pushed his salad bowl to the center of the table. “When they start getting bent out of shape, then you know you’re getting somewhere. Intro Law 101.”
“You ever take 102?”
Wirf dropped his fork, looked hurt.
“I just wondered,” Sully grinned.
“I can’t do this without you,” Wirf implored. “I’m way the fuck out on a limb here, and all I can hear is you sawing away.”
“I been telling you to quit for months,” Sully reminded him. “I’m tired of watching you get beat up. I can’t pay you what I owe you now.”
“Have I asked you for anything?”
“Yes. Just now. You ate half my linguine.”
“I never asked for that. You offered.”
“I can’t stand to see you look starved. I wish you’d go away and do something profitable. If guys like you and me could beat insurance companies there wouldn’t be any insurance companies. Common Sense 101.”
Wirf waved his hand at Sully in disgust, then picked up the clam in the center of the table and made a pretense of braining Sully with it. “I guess it’s true,” he said. “A little knowledge is a dangerous fucking thing. Who’d have guessed you could learn anything at Schuyler Springs Community College? I liked you better when you were completely stupid.”