'So that our relationship can move to a new level?' Prompting him, trying to make it easier.
'What level is that?'
'I thought you wanted to open up, discuss feelings, remember?'
'Yeah. I was feeling bad and now that I told you the truth, I feel better.'
'
Steve seemed startled. He took a gulp of his beer, then moved toward the window. In the yard, white smoke billowed from the hibachi. Either a new pope had been selected, or it was time to put on the steaks.
He turned to face her. 'Vic, all these years, I never told anyone else what really happened in that game. I couldn't have told you if I didn't love you.'
'Keep going, partner. What else?'
'I'm sorry I've been such a jerk about moving in together. I figured everything was good the way it was. We each had our own space, and I was afraid that if something changed, we'd be headed for the great unknown. So I guess I was scared.'
'And now?'
'Life is the great unknown, isn't it? If we shy away from risks, we're running from life.'
'So you do have plans? For us, I mean.'
'My mind's full of plans, except I call them 'hopes.' When we met, I didn't dare
She didn't know how far to push him, but she couldn't leave that hanging. 'What sort of hopes?'
'You know, permanent stuff.'
'Yeah?'
'Marriage. Kids.' His voice a whisper.
'Is that what you really want, Steve?' Asking ever so gently, trying not to frighten him.
'Someday,' he said quickly. 'If all goes well.'
Victoria took both Steve's arms and wrapped them around her waist, because the poor guy seemed incapable of movement. Then she cupped his face in her hands and kissed him. As their lips touched, she murmured, 'Those are my hopes, too.'
She kissed him again and their bodies folded into each other, the contours fitting perfectly, a yin and yang of man and woman. 'And by the way, I've studied those photos from the game. You did get in under the tag.'
'No, Vic. I remember the glove hitting my hand.'
'You remember wrong, lover. You were safe. You've always been safe.'
Thirty-Four
Several hours after the words 'marriage' and 'kids' tumbled from his mouth like skydivers leaping from a plane, Steve Solomon took stock of his life.
He had shared his feelings with Victoria and it hadn't hurt. They loved each other and had recommitted. They were about to take the giant step of buying a place and moving in together. Steve, Victoria, and Bobby. A ready- made family.
Bobby seemed happier at dinner, too. Steve made him laugh, and the kid worked up his first anagram in a week. Who knew that 'President George Bush' could be rearranged to spell 'The person is buggered'?
Now Victoria lay alongside Steve in bed. They had eaten their steaks and polished off an entire pie. They had talked some more in the bedroom, had made love, talked some more, made love again, and talked even more.
Steve was just drifting off to sleep, thinking he wouldn't trade places with anyone else in the world, when he heard the
The house was dark, and he was naked. He reached under the bed, grabbed an aluminum softball bat, and padded out of the bedroom. In the kitchen, he peered through the sliding glass door. The backyard was an ominous greenish black, the foliage backlit by a neighbor's powerful anticrime spotlights. Something seemed different, but what was it?
It only took a second. The grill cover was on the ground. A metal lid, it should have been leaning against the house, where he'd left it. But it had been moved, maybe two feet, as if someone walking along the house in the dark had stumbled over it.
Steve unlocked the glass door, slid it open, and slipped outside, gripping the bat in his right hand. It was light and whippy. He could crush someone's skull with it, no problem.
He smelled something burning. What the hell?
Then a woman's voice, out of the darkness. 'You've gotten bigger since you were nine.'
Heart racing, Steve wheeled around, ready to swing the bat.
'Over here, Stevie.'
He wheeled the other way and saw the glow of the cigarette and a heavyset figure reclining on the chaise lounge.
'Jesus, Janice! What are you doing here?'
'Here. Take this.' She sat up in the chaise and tossed a towel at him. 'You remember how Mom always made me give you a bath when you were little? You hated it.'
Steve wrapped the towel-wet and cold-around his waist. 'You stoned, Janice? What the hell's going on?'
'Clean and sober. I came to see Bobby.'
'In the middle of the night?'
'It's the only time we can talk without you hovering over us like a wicked stepmother. Or stepuncle, or whatever the hell you are.'
'I'm his caregiver. I'm his father and his mother, and I'd rather see him raised by wolves than by you.'
'You're so great at it, where the hell is he?'
'In bed. Sleeping.'
'Yeah, well, I just rapped on his window for ten minutes and he ain't there.'
Steve's first thought was that Bobby was sleeping so soundly, he didn't hear Janice at the window. But no, the kid was a nervous sleeper. A car door slamming down the block, a police siren on Douglas Road, a teakettle whistling. . everything woke him up.
A second later, Steve raced into the house and down the corridor. He threw open the door to Bobby's room and flicked on the lights. The bed was messed. And empty.
'Bobby!' Steve yelled. 'Bobby! Where are you? Bobby!'