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In June, Ryan took a Greyhound to Texas for another try at Class C ball.

“It’s being inside all the time that gets you,” Mr. Majestyk said. “That’s why I sold the tavern. You got to get out and do what you want to do and feel you own yourself. You know what I mean?”

“When I quit the job at Sears,” Ryan said, “that’s the way I felt.”

“Sure, I know what you mean. What about the baseball?”

“I told you, I got this bad back.”

“I mean when did you play Class C?”

“It was just three summers, I thought I told you,” Ryan said. “I’d work at these jobs the rest of the year. Then two summers I didn’t play because of my back. Then it felt okay and I tried out again this June, figuring I could make it.”

“Yeah?” Mr. Majestyk was interested.

“But my back-I don’t know, it gave me a hitch in my swing. A guy would curve me and I’d get all out of shape. So I come home, figure forget it.”

“You drove up with the migrants, uh?”

“That’s right. This crew leader offered me a job, so I figured why not?”

“Christ, you sure belted him.”

“Well, he had it coming. If it wasn’t me, it would be somebody else.”

Mr. Majestyk finished his beer and wiped his mouth with a paper napkin. “What have you got to do?”

“I’m still clearing that frontage, all the driftwood and crap.”

“Hey, we never figured your day off.”

“I thought Saturday,” Ryan said.

“Saturday’s out. That’s our busy day, people leaving, new people coming in. Tomorrow or Friday.”

“Tomorrow’s all right. I don’t care.”

“You got nothing to do, take a run up and see that property. rogers, the sign says.” Mr. Majestyk paused; he made a decision, and looked right at Ryan and said, “I see you got a car.”

“It’s just borrowed.”

“I didn’t think she gave it to you.”

When Mr. Majestyk paused again, Ryan waited; he wasn’t going to help him; if the guy wanted to stick his nose in, he’d have to think of a way to do it.

Finally Mr. Majestyk said, “That’s the car she run the two guys off the road with.”

“I figured,” Ryan said, “from the dings in the front end.”

“The one kid has got two broken legs and internal injuries.”

“You told me.”

“Long as you remember,” Mr. Majestyk said. He dropped it there.

Ryan had a cigarette and stretched out in the sun for a half hour, then got going on the frontage again, raking out the tangled brush and crap and dragging it into a pile. He was burning it when Mr. Majestyk came grinding across the uneven ground in his bulldozer, a stubby yellow machine that Ryan figured must be the smallest one made, though, God, the diesel engine made a racket. Mr. Majestyk showed him the gears and how to raise and lower the blade and for the next couple of hours Ryan played with the bulldozer, gradually digging out a hollow to bury the junk in that wouldn’t burn.

When the beer drinkers from No. 11 came down with the Scotch-Kooler, he knew it was after four, time to knock off. He’d bury the junk tomorrow. No, Friday. He was hot and sweaty from two and a half hours in the field; he was wearing just his cut-off khakis, so he walked out into the lake and swam to the raft and back. He wasn’t a good swimmer; he had no endurance, but his form was good and it wasn’t any harder than swimming out to the boat last night. That was funny, he hadn’t thought about her all day. He thought about a beer and walked across the beach within ten feet of the beer drinkers ready to say “hi” if they looked at him, but they were laughing at something and didn’t seem to notice him.

“Hey, you got a phone call!” Mr. Majestyk was crossing in front of No. 1 from his house.

“Where?”

“No, a message. I told her you were working. She says to tell you six o’clock.”

“She give you her name?”

Mr. Majestyk’s solemn expression held on Ryan. “Maybe you’re crazy, she isn’t.”

Ryan moved off. The hell with him and what he thought.

He was near the swimming pool when Virginia Murray came out of No. 5. He saw her waiting for him and there was nothing he could do about it.

“Hi-I thought you were going to fix my window.”

She was in her aqua bathing suit. She had come in from the pool, had seen Ryan, had wiped the oil from her face, and gone out again.

“Hey, I forgot-no, I didn’t forget, I just couldn’t get to it today.”

“Could you look at it now?”

Her figure was all right. Pretty good, in fact: nice bazooms, good legs, not too fat, but sunburned and sore-looking; over a week here and still sunburned.

“Listen, I would but I got to run. This person is waiting for me.” He was moving away. “Tomorrow for sure, okay?” She was nodding as he turned and that was the end of it.

* * *

He turned off the Shore Road and followed the winding drive through the trees to Old Pointe Road, then crept along until he saw the new-looking white two-story house with the attached garage and well-kept shrubbery. The name on the mailbox, R. J. Ritchie, made him hesitate. He hadn’t got a good look at this side of the house last night. They had come around through the trees and he had waited by the garage while Nancy went in for the wire. He turned into Ritchie’s drive slowly.

“You’re late, Jackie.”

Her voice came from above. From one of the second-floor windows. He saw her now, leaning on the windowsill, looking down at him. “Walk in,” she said. “The door’s open.” She was holding something in her hand. Ryan pulled close to the garage and stopped. Looking straight up now, he saw the gun. Nancy was pointing it at him.

11

RYAN WENT FROM THE KITCHEN into the living room, taking his time as he looked around, the appraiser getting the feel of the place: the white walls and the dark wood in the quiet of early evening, the hardwood floor and the Oriental rug and the iron stairway that came up out of the living room floor and curved once into the ceiling. The dining room, too, through the open doorway was white and dark with a heavy table and wrought iron things on the wall.

You would have to be a weight lifter to clean this place. He walked over to the den and looked in. It was paneled, stained a gray-green with canvas chairs and big blue and green ashtrays. He wasn’t sure of the paintings; maybe they were all right, but he couldn’t put a price on them. The color TV he could get a hundred and a half for. He came back into the living room to the sliding glass doors along the front wall. Below, out past the sun deck, he could see the swimming pool and the lawn. Standing closer to the glass, he could see part of the patio.

He turned as Nancy came down the stairs-brown legs and a straw purse, then tan shorts and sweater and her dark hair.

She said, “Did you go to the lodge?”

It came as a little shock feeling inside him that he hadn’t gone out to look at Ray’s hunting lodge, that he had forgotten all about it.