"But I think so. If one of these jerks doesn't talk her into living with him instead. But girls now-they're not so easy to talk into things. They're, what's the word, empowered. Judy teases me, the way I keep looking at her, but it's amazing to me, how beautiful she's become, even since I saw her last summer. Every tooth, every eyelash, you know, just so
"She sounds like
"Really? Mom's such a misfit, and Judy's such a smart fit, but, yeah, maybe in a way. Bonewise."
"And Pru?"
"Good news. She saw this ad for 'Human Resources Assistant' for one of the big banks down on Market Street saying 'peopleoriented individual' and they liked her; she's one of three they've narrowed it down to. Her experience wasn't quite what they want but I guess this guy Gekopoulos wrote her a raving recommendation."
"I meant you and Pru."
"Oh. Oh. That's O.K. You've met her, you know what she's like. She isn't one to make a big show of her feelings, usually. She says having a man in the apartment is as bad as having two untrained dogs. She should talk, we're surrounded by her relatives out here, they keep calling up and dropping around."
"You certainly are more talkative, now you're back with her."
"It's
"Oh, no. But why do you call her Pru? Your mother calls her Teresa."
"How'd you know that?"
"She called, to invite me to dinner. Just her and Ronnie. And Billy if I wished."
"Billy. That goon. I'm sorry I saddled you with him that night. He got me lost, in my own county, and then stuck in traffic at the greatest moment in history."
"Yes, it was terrible the way he did that. He cries about it in his sleep."
A pause, while he wonders how much he's supposed to make of this disclosure. "About Teresa," he says. "That's her name, but in high school everybody thought she was prudish, and there was another Terry in the class. You're right, though, it's nice to be back with her. I love her, I guess."
"Of course you do."
"I've begun to check around, for jobs in mental health. Akron's a lot like Brewer except it's three times as big. It has the same river, and miles of row houses, and abandoned plants turned into something else-they've turned a huge Quaker Oats factory into a Hilton Hotel with round rooms in the old grain silos-and no shortage of misery. I was thinking of looking for something in a drug-rehab place. Addicts may freeze to death but they don't do suicide."
"That was too bad. I could tell how upset you were."
"I wasn't that upset. Esther told me not to take it egotistically. She asked me when I gave notice if that was the reason. I said I hoped not. Hey, Happy Birthday! Forty. Wow."
"You remembered."
"How could I forget? I even have a quotation to give you. 'The very motion of our life is towards happiness.' End quote."
"What's that from?"
"From a very dumb book Ronnie Harrison gave me for Christmas. It's on page one, which is as far as I've gotten."
"Maybe you should go on to page two."He has broken the lovely flow they were having. Ronnie Harrison still frightens her. He asks, "How's the weather in DiamondCounty?"
"I know. Here too. The same weather, basically the sameeverything. But I like it. I like seeing different license plates."
"Your mother said over the phone she and Ronnie are going down to the Florida condo and thinking of selling the house and moving there for good. They both have aches and pains warm weather might help."
"For
She waits."Delicious. Sweet. Innocent," he finds himself saying.
"Nelson."
"Yes?"
"I
"Surprise, surprise."
"You're teasing, aren't you, when you call him a goon?"
"Well, he was a
"I think he's darling."
"In what way?"
"He thinks I'm wonderful. After those horrible things you got me to admit in the car at least I don't have anything to hide from him. He says when he's with me his anxieties go away."