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“This is Leventhal,” he said. “How are you?”

“Leventhal? Oh, Asa Leventhal. How are you, Asa?” He thought she didn’t sound unfriendly. It was too much to ask that she should be positively cordial, considering that this was his first call in three or four years.

“I’m good enough.”

“You want to talk to Stan, I suppose.”

“Yes.”

He heard the instrument being laid on the table with a knock and then, for several minutes, the sound of a conversation carried on at a distance. “He doesn’t want to talk to me,” thought Leventhal. “He must be telling her that she should have said he was out.” Presently the phone was picked up.

“Hello, there.”

“Yes, hello. Is that you, Asa?”

Leventhal said without preliminaries, “Say, Stan, I want to see you. Can you give me a little time tonight?”

“Oh, tonight? That’s pretty short notice.”

“Yes, I know it is. I should have asked if you were going out.”

“Well, we were planning to later, as a matter of fact.”

“I won’t stay. About fifteen minutes is all I want.”

“Where are you now?”

“Not far. I’ll grab a taxi.”

It seemed to him that Williston did not conceal his reluctance. But when he said, “All right,” Leventhal did not even bother to say good-by. He did not care how Williston consented to see him, just so he consented. He went into the middle of the street and flagged a cab. Of course, he observed to himself getting in, Williston was displeased by his phoning and blurting out his request, dispensing with the usual formalities. But there was much more than that to be concerned about, assuming that Williston really did side with Allbee, There was fairness, a man’s reputation, honor. And there were other considerations as well.

The cab raced uptown, and Leventhal suddenly felt his face burning, for he had just recalled a verse his father had liked to repeat:

Ruf mir Yoshke, ruf mir Moshke,

Aber gib mir die groschke.

“Call me Ikey, call me Moe, but give me the dough. What’s it to me if you despise me? What do you think equality with you means to me? What do you have that I care about except the groschen?” That was his father’s view. But not his. He rejected it and recoiled from it. Anyway, his father had lived poor and died poor, that stern, proud old fool with his savage looks, to whom nothing mattered save his advantage and to be freed by money from the power of his enemies. And who were the enemies? The world, everyone. They were imaginary. There was no advantage. He carried on like a merchant prince among his bolts and remnants, and was willing to be a pack rat in order to become a lion. There was no advantage; he never became a lion. It gave Leventhal pain to think about his father’s sense of these things. He roused himself to tell the driver to hurry. But the cab was already in Williston’s block, and he grasped the handle of the door.

He recognized the elderly Negro who took him up in the elevator. Short, broad-shouldered, and slow, he stooped over the lever, handling it with the utmost deliberateness. They rose and stopped smoothly on the fourth floor. The knocker on Williston’s door was also familiar — a woman’s head cast in copper that surprised you by its heaviness.

Phoebe Williston let him in. Leventhal shook hands with her and she preceded him along the high-walled gray corridor into the living-room. Williston stood up from his chair in the bay window, a newspaper falling from his lap and spreading around the base of the lamp. He was in his shirt sleeves, the cuffs turned back on his smooth, reddish forearms. He hadn’t lost any of his ruddy color. His brown hair was brushed sideways and his dark green satin tie hung unknotted from his buttoned collar.

“Pretty much the same, eh?” he said in his pleasant, deep voice.

“Yes, just about. You, too, I see.”

“A couple of years older all around,” Phoebe remarked.

“Well, it goes without saying.”

Williston brought another chair forward in the bay window and the two men sat down. Phoebe remained standing, resting her weight on one foot, her arms folded, and Leventhal thought that her look was fixed on him longer than it need have been. He submitted to this prolonged look with an air of allowing her the right, under the circumstances, to inspect him.

“You seem to be all right, filled out,” she said. “How’s your wife?”

“Oh, she’s out of town for a while, down South with her mother and family. She’s fine.”

“Lord! South in this weather? And are you still in the same place?”

“Address or job? Both the same. The same job, Burke and Beard; same people. I guess Stan knows.”

The maid came in to ask Phoebe a question. She was a pale, slow-spoken girl. Phoebe listened, inclining her head and twisting her necklace in her fingers. She went back with her to the kitchen. Williston explained, “That’s a new girl learning her way around.” Leventhal, as in the past, felt conscious of a household that had more of the atmosphere of established habit than any he had ever known. Williston lay loosely in his chair, crossing his feet, his fingers pushed under his belt. Within the metal guard of the semicircular window were several flowerpots with blossoms coarse as bits of red ore. Looking at them, Leventhal considered how he should begin. He was unprepared. It had seemed simple enough; he came with a grievance and he wanted an explanation. Perhaps he had counted on finding Williston roused against him; he certainly had not expected him to sit back and wait while minute after minute of the time he had requested ran out. He had not foreseen the effect Williston was having on him; he had forgotten what he was like. More than once, in the old days, he had mistrusted him. He had been full of rancor toward him when he thought Williston was uneasy about the reference letter. But on that occasion and others he had changed his opinion; he invariably did when he was face to face with Williston. He came to him complaining, but soon, without quite knowing how it happened, he began to feel unsure of his ground. So it was now, and he was unable to start. He sat in the bay window looking down, over the heads of the flowers, at the sprinting headlights in the depth of the park below the net of trees, as they turned on a curve and illuminated the boulders and trailing bushes of a steep hillside, one beam after another passing through an immobility of black and green.

“I wanted to talk to you about your friend Allbee,” he said at last. “Maybe you understand what he’s up to.”

Williston was immediately interested; he lifted himself up in his chair. “Allbee? Have you seen him?”

“I sure have.”

“I lost track of him years ago. What’s he doing? Where did you see him?”

But Leventhal would answer no questions till he knew where he stood with Williston. “What was he doing last time you saw him?” he said.

“Nothing. He was living on insurance money. His wife was killed, you know.”

“I heard.”

“It hit him hard. He loved her.”

“All right, he loved her. He didn’t go to her funeral. And why did she leave him?”