'Going over to Abe's, eh?' Nick said. He had three chins, one little one supported by two big ones, all in need of a shave.

'Yeah. Thought I'd bring the junky his fix.'

'Tell him I said 'lo.'

'Right. '

He walked over to Amsterdam Avenue and then down to the Isher Sports Shop. Here he knew he'd find Abe Grossman, friend and confidant for almost as long as he’d been Repairman Jack. In fact, Abe was one of the reasons Jack had moved into this neighborhood. Abe was the ultimate pessimist. No matter how dark things looked, Abe's outlook was darker. He could make a drowning man feel lucky.

Jack glanced through the window. A balding, overweight man in his late fifties was alone inside, sitting on a stool behind the cash register, reading a paperback.

The store was too small for its stock. Bicycles hung from the ceiling; fishing rods, tennis racquets, and basketball hoops littered the walls while narrow aisles wound between pressing-benches, hockey nets, scuba masks, soccer balls, and countless other weekend-making items hidden under or behind each other. Inventory was an annual nightmare.

'No customers?' Jack asked to the accompaniment of the bell that chimed when the door opened.

Abe peered over the half moons of his reading glasses. 'None. And the census won't be changed by your arrival, I'm sure.'

'Au contraire. I come with goodies in hand and money in pocket.”

“Did you—?' Abe peered over the counter at the white box with the blue lettering. 'You did! Crumb?” His fingers did a come-hither waggle. “Come to Papa.”

Abe Grossman defined the concept of rotund. He carried way too much weight for a frame that fell short of five-eight. His graying hair had receded to the top of his head. His clothes never varied: black pants, short-sleeve white shirt, shiny black tie. The tie and shirt were a sort of scratch-and-sniff catalog of the food he’d eaten that day. As Jack neared the counter he spotted scrambled egg, mustard, and what could be either catsup or spaghetti sauce.

Just then the door dinged as a big burly fellow in a dirty sleeveless undershirt came through.

'You got softballs? I need three, quick like.'

'Softballs we don’t have,' Abe said without looking up. His eyes never left the Entenmann’s box. 'Hardballs neither.'

The guy made a face. “No softballs? What kinda sports store is that?'

“The kind that doesn’t have softballs.” Abe removed his glasses and gave the man a withering stare. “I should explain my inventory?”

The guy left, slamming the door behind him.

Jack pointed at a softball-laden shelf to his right. 'You’ve got at least a dozen right there.'

He shrugged. “I know, but then this cake would be lonely while I dealt with him. An Entenmann’s crumb cake should never be lonely.”

Jack handed him the box. “You want me to leave you two alone?”

'Feh!” he said as he lifted the lid. “You really know how to hurt a guy.' He broke off a piece of cake and biting heartily. 'You know I'm on a diet.' Powdered sugar speckled his tie as he spoke.

'Yeah. I noticed.'

'I should lie? I'm on low carb—except for Entenmann's. That's a free food. All other carbs have to be counted, but Entenmann's is ad lib.' He took another big bite and spoke around it. Crumb cake always made him manic. 'Did I tell you I added a codicil to my will? I've decided that after I'm cremated my ashes should be buried in an Entenmann's box. Or if I'm not cremated, it should be a white, glass-topped coffin with blue lettering on the side.' He held up the cake box. 'Just like this. Either way, I should be interred on a grassy slope overlooking the Entenmann's plant in Bay Shore.'

Jack tried to smile but it must have been a poor attempt. Abe stopped in mid-chew.

'What's eating up your guderim?'

'Saw Gia today.'

'Nu?'

'It's over. Really over.'

'You didn't know that?'

'I knew it but I didn't believe it.' Jack forced himself to ask a question he wasn't sure he wanted answered. 'Am I crazy, Abe? Is there something wrong in my head for wanting to live this way? Is my pilot light flickering and I don't know it?'

Without taking his eyes from Jack's face, Abe put down his piece of cake and made a halfhearted attempt to brush off his front. He succeeded only in smearing the sugar specks on his tie into large white blotches.

'What did she do to you?'

'Opened my eyes, maybe. Sometimes it takes an outsider to make you see yourself as you really are.'

'And you see what?'

Jack took a deep breath. 'A crazy man.'

'That's what her eyes see. But what does she know? Does she know about Mr.

Вы читаете The Tomb (Repairman Jack)
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