CHAPTER TWELVE
BY AIR TO DES MOINES
1
Sam looked at his wristwatch and was astounded to
see it was almost 3:00 P.M. Midnight was only
nine hours away, and then the tall man with the silver eyes would
be back. Or Ardelia Lortz would be back. Or maybe both of them
together.
“What do you think I should do, Dave? Go out to the
local graveyard and find Ardelia’s body and pound a stake through
her heart?”
“A good trick if you could do it,” he replied,
“since the lady was cremated.”
“Oh,” Sam said. He settled back into his chair with
a little helpless sigh.
Naomi took his hand again. “In any case, you won’t
be doing anything alone,” she said firmly. “Dave says she means to
do us as well as you, but that’s almost beside the point. Friends
stand by when there’s trouble. That’s the point. What else
are they for?”
Sam lifted her hand to his lips and kissed it.
“Thank you—but I don’t know what you can do. Or me, either. There
doesn’t seem to be anything to do. Unless ...” He looked at Dave
hopefully. “Unless I ran?”
Dave shook his head. “She—or it—sees. I told
you that. I guess you could drive most of the way to Denver before
midnight if you really put your foot down and the cops didn’t catch
you, but Ardelia Lortz would be right there to greet you when you
got out of your car. Or you’d look over in some dark mile and see
the Library Policeman sittin next to you on the seat.”
The thought of that—the white face and silver eyes,
illuminated only by the green glow of the dashboard lights—made Sam
shiver.
“What, then?”
“I think you both know what has to be done first,”
Dave said. He drank the last of his iced tea and then set the glass
on the porch. “Just think a minute, and you’ll see.”
Then they all looked out toward the grain elevator
for awhile. Sam’s mind was a roaring confusion; all he could catch
hold of were isolated snatches of Dave Duncan’s story and the voice
of the Library Policeman, with his strange little lisp, saying I
don’t want to hear your sick ecthcuses ... You have until
midnight ... then I come again.
It was on Naomi’s face that light suddenly
dawned.
“Of course!” she said. “How stupid! But ...”
She asked Dave a question, and Sam’s own eyes
widened in understanding.
“There’s a place in Des Moines, as I recall,” Dave
said. “Pell’s. If any place can help, it’ll be them. Why don’t you
make a call, Sarah?”
2
When she was gone, Sam said: “Even if they can
help, I don’t think we could get there before the close of business
hours. I can try, I suppose ...”
“I never expected you’d drive,” Dave said. “No—you
and Sarah have to go out to the Proverbia Airport.”
Sam blinked. “I didn’t know there was an
airport in Proverbia.”
Dave smiled. “Well ... I guess that is
stretchin it a little. There’s a half-mile of packed dirt Stan
Soames calls a runway. Stan’s front parlor is the office of Western
Iowa Air Charter. You and Sarah talk to Stan. He’s got a little
Navajo. He’ll take you to Des Moines and have you back by eight
o’clock, nine at the latest.”
“What if he’s not there?”
“Then we’ll try to figure out something else. I
think he will be, though. The only thing Stan loves more than flyin
is farm-in, and come the spring of the year, farmers don’t stray
far. He’ll probably tell you he can’t take you because of his
garden, come to that—he’ll say you shoulda made an appointment a
few days in advance so he could get the Carter boy to come over and
babysit his back ninety. If he says that, you tell him Dave Duncan
sent you, and Dave says it’s time to pay for the baseballs. Can you
remember that?”
“Yes, but what does it mean?”
“Nothing that concerns this business,” Dave said.
“He’ll take you, that’s the important thing. And when he lands you
again, never mind comin here. You and Sarah drive straight into
town.”
Sam felt dread begin to seep into his body. “To the
Library.”
“That’s right.”
“Dave, what Naomi said about friends is all very
sweet—and maybe even true—but I think I have to take it from here.
Neither one of you has to be a part of this. I was the one
responsible for stirring her up again—”
Dave reached out and seized Sam’s wrist in a grip
of surprising strength. “If you really think that, you haven’t
heard a word I’ve said. You’re not responsible for anything.
I carry the deaths of John Power and two little children on my
conscience—not to mention the terrors I don’t know how many other
children may have suffered—but I’m not responsible, either. Not
really. I didn’t set out to be Ardelia Lortz’s companion any more
than I set out to be a thirty-year drunk. Both things just
happened. But she bears me a grudge, and she will be back for me,
Sam. If I’m not with you when she comes, she’ll visit me first. And
I won’t be the only one she visits. Sarah was right, Sam. She and I
don’t have to stay close to protect you; the three of us have to
stay close to protect each other. Sarah knows about Ardelia,
don’t you see? If Ardelia don’t know that already, she will as soon
as she shows up tonight. She plans to go on from Junction City as
you, Sam. Do you think she’ll leave anybody behind who knows
her new identity?”
“But—”
“But nothin,” Dave said. “In the end it comes down
to a real simple choice, one even an old souse like me can
understand: we share this together or we’re gonna die at her
hands.”
He leaned forward.
“If you want to save Sarah from Ardelia, Sam,
forget about bein a hero and start rememberin who your
Library Policeman was. You have to. Because I don’t believe
Ardelia can take just anyone. There’s only one coincidence in this
business, but it’s a killer: once you had a Library
Policeman, too. And you have to get that memory back.”
“I’ve tried,” Sam said, and knew that was a lie.
Because every time he turned his mind toward
(come with me, son ... I’m a
poleethman)
that voice, it shied away. He tasted red licorice,
which he had never eaten and always hated—and that was all.
“You have to try harder,” Dave said, “or there’s no
hope.”
Sam drew in a deep breath and let it out. Dave’s
hand touched the back of his neck, then squeezed it gently.
“It’s the key to this,” Dave said. “You may even
find it’s the key to everything that has troubled you in your life.
To your loneliness and your sadness.”
Sam looked at him, startled. Dave smiled.
“Oh yes,” he said. “You’re lonely, you’re sad, and
you’re closed off from other people. You talk a good game, but you
don’t walk what you talk. Up until today I wasn’t nothing to you
but Dirty Dave who comes to get your papers once a month, but a man
like me sees a lot, Sam. And it takes one to know one.”
“The key to everything,” Sam mused. He wondered if
there really were such conveniences, outside of popular novels and
movies-of-the-week populated with Brave Psychiatrists and Troubled
Patients.
“It’s true,” Dave persisted. “Such things are
dreadful in their power, Sam. I don’t blame you for not wantin to
search for it. But you can, you know, if you want to. You have that
choice.”
“Is that something else you learn in AA,
Dave?”
He smiled. “Well, they teach it there,” he said,
“but that’s one I guess I always knew.”
Naomi came out onto the porch again. She was
smiling and her eyes were sparkling.
“Ain’t she some gorgeous?” Dave asked
quietly.
“Yes,” Sam said. “She sure is.” He was clearly
aware of two things: that he was falling in love, and that Dave
Duncan knew it.
3
“The man took so long checking that I got
worried,” she said, “but we’re in luck.”
“Good,” Dave said. “You two are goin out to see
Stan Soames, then. Does the Library still close at eight during the
school year, Sarah?”
“Yes—I’m pretty sure it does.”
“I’ll be payin a visit there around five o’clock,
then. I’ll meet you in back, where the loadin platform is, between
eight and nine. Nearer eight would be better—n safer. For Christ’s
sake, try not to be late.”
“How will we get in?” Sam asked.
“I’ll take care of that, don’t worry. You just get
goin.”
“Maybe we ought to call this guy Soames from here,”
Sam said. “Make sure he’s available.”
Dave shook his head. “Won’t do no good. Stan’s wife
left him for another man four years ago—claimed he was married to
his work, which always makes a good excuse for a woman who’s got a
yen to make a change. There aren’t any kids. He’ll be out in his
field. Go on, now. Daylight’s wastin.”
Naomi bent over and kissed Dave’s cheek. “Thank you
for telling us,” she said.
“I’m glad I did it. It’s made me feel ever so much
better.”
Sam started to offer Dave his hand, then thought
better of it. He bent over the old man and hugged him.
4
Stan Soames was a tall, rawboned man with angry
eyes burning out of a gentle face, a man who already had his summer
sunburn although calendar spring had not yet run its first month.
Sam and Naomi found him in the field behind his house, just as Dave
had told them they would. Seventy yards north of Soames’s idling,
mud-splashed Rototiller, Sam could see what looked like a dirt road
... but since there was a small airplane with a tarpaulin thrown
over it at one end and a windsock fluttering from a rusty pole at
the other, he assumed it was the Proverbia Airport’s single
runway.
“Can’t do it,” Soames said. “I got fifty acres to
turn this week and nobody but me to do it. You should have called a
couple-three days ahead.”
“It’s an emergency,” Naomi said. “Really, Mr.
Soames.”
He sighed and spread his arms, as if to encompass
his entire farm. “You want to know what an emergency is?” he asked.
“What the government’s doing to farms like this and people like me.
That’s a dad-ratted emergency. Look, there’s a fellow over
in Cedar Rapids who might—”
“We don’t have time to go to Cedar Rapids,” Sam
said. “Dave told us you’d probably say—”
“Dave?” Stan Soames turned to him with more
interest than he had heretofore shown. “Dave who?”
“Duncan. He told me to say it’s time to pay for the
baseballs.”
Soames’s brows drew down. His hands rolled
themselves up into fists, and for just a moment Sam thought the man
was going to slug him. Then, abruptly, he laughed and shook his
head.
“After all these years, Dave Duncan pops outta the
woodwork with his IOU rolled up in his hand! Goddam!”
He began walking toward the Rototiller. He turned
his head to them as he did, yelling to make himself heard over the
machine’s enthusiastic blatting. “Walk on over to the airplane
while I put this goddam thing away! Mind the boggy patch just on
the edge of the runway, or it’ll suck your damned shoes
off!”
Soames threw the Rototiller into gear. It was hard
to tell with all the noise, but Sam thought he was still laughing.
“I thought that drunk old bastard was gonna die before I could
quit evens with him!”
He roared past them toward his barn, leaving Sam
and Naomi looking at each other.
“What was.that all about?” Naomi asked.
“I don’t know—Dave wouldn’t tell me.” He offered
her his arm. “Madam, will you walk with me?”
She took it. “Thank you, sir.”
They did their best to skirt the mucky place Stan
Soames had told them about, but didn’t entirely make it. Naomi’s
foot went in to the ankle, and the mud pulled her loafer off when
she jerked her foot back. Sam bent down, got it, and then swept
Naomi into his arms.
“Sam, no!” she cried, startled into laughter.
“You’ll break your back!”
“Nope,” he said. “You’re light.”
She was ... and his head suddenly felt light, too.
He carried her up the graded slope of the runway to the airplane
and set her on her feet. Naomi’s eyes looked up into his with
calmness and a sort of luminous clarity. Without thinking, he bent
and kissed her. After a moment, she put her arms around his neck
and kissed him back.
When he looked at her again, he was slightly out of
breath. Naomi was smiling.
“You can call me Sarah anytime you want to,” she
said. Sam laughed and kissed her again.
5
Riding in the Navajo behind Stan Soames was like
riding piggyback on a pogo stick. They bounced and jounced on
uneasy tides of spring air, and Sam thought once or twice that they
might cheat Ardelia in a way not even that strange creature could
have foreseen: by spreading themselves all over an Iowa
cornfield.
Stan Soames didn’t seem to be worried, however; he
bawled out such hoary old ballads as “Sweet Sue” and “The Sidewalks
of New York” at the top of his voice as the Navajo lurched toward
Des Moines. Naomi was transfixed, peering out of her window at the
roads and fields and houses below with her hands cupped to the
sides of her face to cut the glare.
At last Sam tapped her on the shoulder. “You act
like you’ve never flown before!” he yelled over the mosquito-drone
of the engine.
She turned briefly toward him and grinned like an
enraptured schoolgirl. “I haven’t!” she said, and returned at once
to the view.
“I’ll be damned,” Sam said, and then tightened his
seatbelt as the plane took another of its gigantic, bucking
leaps.
6
It was twenty past four when the Navajo skittered
down from the sky and landed at County Airport in Des Moines.
Soames taxied to the Civil Air Terminal, killed the engine, then
opened the door. Sam was a little amused at the twinge of jealousy
he felt as Soames put his hands on Naomi’s waist to help her
down.
“Thank you!” she gasped. Her cheeks were now deeply
flushed and her eyes were dancing. “That was
wonderful!”
Soames smiled, and suddenly he looked forty instead
of sixty. “I’ve always liked it myself,” he said, “and it beats
spendin an afternoon abusin my kidneys on that Rototiller ... I
have to admit that.” He looked from Naomi to Sam. “Can you tell me
what this big emergency is? I’ll help if I can—I owe Dave a little
more’n a puddle-jump from Proverbia to Des Moines and back
again.”
“We need to go into town,” Sam said. “To a place
called Pell’s Book Shop. They’re holding a couple of books for
us.”
Stan Soames looked at them, eyes wide. “Come
again?”
“Pell’s—”
“I know Pell’s,” he said. “New books out front, old
books in the back. Biggest Selection in the Midwest, the ads say.
What I’m tryin to get straight is this: you took me away from my
garden and got me to fly you all the way across the state to get a
couple of books?”
“They’re very important books, Mr. Soames,” Naomi
said. She touched one of his rough farmer’s hands. “Right now,
they’re just about the most important things in my life ... or
Sam’s.”
“Dave’s, too,” Sam said.
“If you told me what was going on,” Soames asked,
“would I be apt to understand it?”
“No,” Sam said.
“No,” Naomi agreed, and smiled a little.
Soames blew a deep sigh out of his wide nostrils
and stuffed his hands into the pockets of his pants. “Well, I guess
it don’t matter that much, anyway. I’ve owed Dave this one for ten
years, and there have been times when it’s weighed on my mind
pretty heavy.” He brightened. “And I got to give a pretty young
lady her first airplane ride. The only thing prettier than a girl
after her first plane ride is a girl after her first—”
He stopped abruptly and scuffed at the tar with his
shoes. Naomi looked discreetly off toward the horizon. Just then a
fuel truck drove up. Soames walked over quickly and fell into deep
conversation with the driver.
Sam said, “You had quite an effect on our fearless
pilot.”
“Maybe I did, at that,” she said. “I feel
wonderful, Sam. Isn’t that crazy?”
He stroked an errant lock of her hair back into
place behind her ear. “It’s been a crazy day. The craziest day I
can ever remember.”
But the inside voice spoke then—it drifted up from
that deep place where great objects were still in motion—and told
him that wasn’t quite true. There was one other that had been just
as crazy. More crazy. The day of The Black Arrow and the red
licorice.
That strange, stifled panic rose in him again, and
he closed his ears to that voice.
If you want to save Sarah from Ardelia, Sam,
forget about bein a hero and start rememberin who your
Library Policeman was.
I don‘t! I can’t! I ... I
mustn’t!
You have to get that memory back.
I mustn’t! It’s not allowed!
You have to try harder or there’s no
hope.
“I really have to go home now,” Sam Peebles
muttered.
Naomi, who had strolled away to look at the
Navajo’s wing-flaps, heard him and came back.
“Did you say something?”
“Nothing. It doesn’t matter.”
“You look very pale.”
“I’m very tense,” he said edgily.
Stan Soames returned. He cocked a thumb at the
driver of the fuel truck. “Dawson says I can borrow his car. I’ll
run you into town.”
“We could call a cab—” Sam began.
Naomi was shaking her head. “Time’s too short for
that,” she said. “Thank you very much, Mr. Soames.”
“Aw, hell,” Soames said, and then flashed her a
little-boy grin. “You go on and call me Stan. Let’s go. Dawson says
there’s low pressure movin in from Colorado. I want to get back to
Junction City before the rain starts.”
7
Pell’s was a big barnlike structure on the edge of
the Des Moines business district—the very antithesis of the
mall-bred chain bookstore. Naomi asked for Mike. She was directed
to the customer-service desk, a kiosk which stood like a customs
booth between the section which sold new books and the larger one
which sold old books.
“My name is Naomi Higgins. I talked to you on the
telephone earlier?”
“Ah, yes,” Mike said. He rummaged on one of his
cluttered shelves and brought out two books. One was Best Loved
Poems of the American People; the other was The Speaker’s
Companion, edited by Kent Adelmen. Sam Peebles had never been
so glad to see two books in his life, and he found himself fighting
an impulse to snatch them from the clerk’s hands and hug them to
his chest.
“Best Loved Poems is easy,” Mike said, “but
The Speaker’s Companion is out of print. I’d guess Pell’s is
the only bookshop between here and Denver with a copy as nice as
this one ... except for library copies, of course.”
“They both look great to me,” Sam said with deep
feeling.
“Is it a gift?”
“Sort of.”
“I can have it gift-wrapped for you, if you like;
it would only take a second.”
“That won’t be necessary,” Naomi said.
The combined price of the books was twenty-two
dollars and fifty-seven cents.
“I can’t believe it,” Sam said as they left the
store and walked toward the place where Stan Soames had parked the
borrowed car. He held the bag tightly in one hand. “I can’t believe
it’s as simple as just ... just returning the books.”
“Don’t worry,” Naomi said. “It won’t be.”
8
As they drove back to the airport, Sam asked Stan
Soames if he could tell them about Dave and the baseballs.
“If it’s personal, that’s okay. I’m just
curious.”
Soames glanced at the bag Sam held in his lap. “I’m
sorta curious about those, too,” he said. “I’ll make you a deal.
The thing with the baseballs happened ten years ago. I’ll tell you
about that if you’ll tell me about the books ten years from
now.”
“Deal,” Naomi said from the back seat, and then
added what Sam himself had been thinking. “If we’re all still
around, of course.”
Soames laughed. “Yeah ... I suppose there’s
always that possibility, isn’t there?”
Sam nodded. “Lousy things sometimes happen.”
“They sure do. One of em happened to my only boy in
1980. The doctors called it leukemia, but it’s really just what you
said—one of those lousy things that sometimes happens.”
“Oh, I’m so sorry,” Naomi said.
“Thanks. Every now and then I start to think I’m
over it, and then it gets on my blind side and hits me again. I
guess some things take a long time to shake out, and some things
don’t ever shake out.”
Some things don’t ever shake out.
Come with me, son ... I’m a
poleethman.
I really have to go home now ... is my fine
paid?
Sam touched the comer of his mouth with a trembling
hand.
“Well, hell, I’d known Dave a long time before it
ever happened,” Stan Soames said. They passed a sign which read
AIRPORT 3 MI. “We grew up together, went to school together, sowed
a mess of wild oats together. The only thing was, I reaped my crop
and quit. Dave just went on sowin.”
Soames shook his head.
“Drunk or sober, he was one of the sweetest fellows
I ever met. But it got so he was drunk more’n he was sober, and we
kinda fell out of touch. It seemed like the worst time for him was
in the late fifties. During those years he was drunk all the
time. After that he started goin to AA, and he seemed to get a
little better ... but he’d always fall off the wagon with a
crash.
“I got married in ’68, and I wanted to ask him to
be my best man, but I didn’t dare. As it happened, he turned up
sober—that time—but you couldn’t trust him to turn up sober.”
“I know what you mean,” Naomi said quietly.
Stan Soames laughed. “Well, I sort of doubt that—a
little sweetie like you wouldn’t know what miseries a dedicated
boozehound can get himself into—but take it from me. If I’d asked
Dave to stand up for me at the weddin, Laura—that’s my ex—would
have shit bricks. But Dave did come, and I saw him a little
more frequently after our boy Joe was born in 1970. Dave seemed to
have a special feeling for all kids during those years when he was
tryin to pull himself out of the bottle.
“The thing Joey loved most was baseball. He was
nuts for it—he collected sticker books, chewing-gum cards ... he
even pestered me to get a satellite dish so we could watch all the
Royals games—the Royals were his favorites—and the Cubs, too, on
WGN from Chicago. By the time he was eight, he knew the averages of
all the Royals starting players, and the won-lost records of damn
near every pitcher in the American League. Dave and I took him to
games three or four times. It was a lot like takin a kid on a
guided tour of heaven. Dave took him alone twice, when I had to
work. Laura had a cow about that—said he’d show up drunk as a
skunk, with the boy left behind, wandering the streets of K.C. or
sittin in a police station somewhere, waitin for someone to come
and get him. But nothing like that ever happened. So far as I know,
Dave never took a drink when he was around Joey.
“When Joe got the leukemia, the worst part for him
was the doctors tellin him he wouldn’t be able to go to any games
that year at least until June and maybe not at all. He was more
depressed about that than he was about having cancer. When Dave
came to see him, Joe cried about it. Dave hugged him and said, ‘If
you can’t go to the games, Joey, that’s okay; I’ll bring the Royals
to you.’
“Joe stared up at him and says, ‘You mean in
person, Uncle Dave?’ That’s what he called him—Uncle
Dave.
“‘I can’t do that,’ Dave said, ‘but I can do
somethin almost as good.’ ”
Soames drove up to the Civil Air Terminal gate and
blew the horn. The gate rumbled back on its track and he drove out
to where the Navajo was parked. He turned off the engine and just
sat behind the wheel for a moment, looking down at his hands.
“I always knew Dave was a talented bastard,” he
said finally. “What I don’t know is how he did what he did so
damned fast. All I can figure is that he must have worked
days and nights both, because he was done in ten days—and those
suckers were good.
“He knew he had to go fast, though. The doctors had
told me and Laura the truth, you see, and I’d told Dave. Joe didn’t
have much chance of pulling through. They’d caught onto what was
wrong with him too late. It was roaring in his blood like a
grassfire.
“About ten days after Dave made that promise, he
comes into my son’s hospital room with a paper shopping-bag in each
arm. ‘What you got there, Uncle Dave?’ Joe asks, sitting up in bed.
He had been pretty low all that day—mostly because he was losin his
hair, I think; in those days if a kid didn’t have hair most of the
way down his back, he was considered to be pretty low-class-but
when Dave came in, he brightened right up.
“ ‘The Royals, a course,’ Dave says back. ‘Didn’t I
tell you?’
“Then he put those two shopping-bags down on the
bed and spilled em out. And you never, ever, in your whole life,
saw such an expression on a little boy’s face. It lit up like a
Christmas tree ... and ... and shit, I dunno ...”
Stan Soames’s voice had been growing steadily
thicker. Now he leaned forward against the steering wheel of
Dawson’s Buick so hard that the horn honked. He pulled a large
bandanna from his back pocket, wiped his eyes with it, then blew
his nose.
Naomi had also leaned forward. She pressed one of
her hands against Soames’s cheek. “If this is too hard for you, Mr.
Soames—”
“No,” he said, and smiled a little. Sam watched as
a tear Stan Soames had missed ran its sparkling, unnoticed course
down his cheek in the late-afternoon sun. “It’s just that it brings
him back so. How he was. That hurts, miss, but it feels good, too.
Those two feelings are all wrapped up together.”
“I understand,” she said.
“When Dave tipped over those bags, what spilled out
was baseballs—over two dozen of them. But they weren’t just
baseballs, because there was a face painted on every one, and each
one was the face of a player on the 1980 Kansas City Royals
baseball team. They weren’t those whatdoyoucallums, caricatures,
either. They were as good as the faces Norman Rockwell used to
paint for the covers of the Saturday Evening Post. I’ve seen
Dave’s work—the work he did before he got drinkin real heavy—and it
was good, but none of it was as good as this. There was Willie
Aikens and Frank White and U. L. Washington and George Brett ...
Willie Wilson and Amos Otis ... Dan Quisenberry, lookin as fierce
as a gunslinger in an old Western movie ... Paul Splittorff and Ken
Brett ... I can’t remember all the names, but it was the whole
damned roster, including Jim Frey, the field manager.
“And sometime between when he finished em and when
he gave em to my son, he took em to K.C. and got all the players
but one to sign em. The one who didn’t was Darrell Porter, the
catcher. He was out with the flu, and he promised to sign the ball
with his face on it as soon as he could. He did, too.”
“Wow,” Sam said softly.
“And it was all Dave’s doing—the man I hear people
in town laugh about and call Dirty Dave. I tell you, sometimes when
I hear people say that and I remember what he did for Joe when Joey
was dying of the leukemia, I could—”
Soames didn’t finish, but his hands curled
themselves into fists on his broad thighs. And Sam—who had used the
name himself until today, and laughed with Craig Jones and Frank
Stephens over the old drunk with his shopping-cart full of
newspapers—felt a dull and shameful heat mount into his
cheeks.
“That was a wonderful thing to do, wasn’t it?”
Naomi asked, and touched Stan Soames’s cheek again. She was
crying.
“You shoulda seen his face,” Soames said dreamily.
“You wouldn’t have believed how he looked, sittin up in his bed and
lookin down at all those faces with their K.C. baseball caps on
their round heads. I can’t describe it, but I’ll never forget
it.
“You shoulda seen his face.
“Joe got pretty sick before the end, but he didn’t
ever get too sick to watch the Royals on TV—or listen to em on the
radio—and he kept those balls all over his room. The windowsill by
his bed was the special place of honor, though. That’s where he’d
line up the nine men who were playin in the game he was watchin or
listenin to on the radio. If Frey took out the pitcher, Joe would
take that one down from the windowsill and put up the relief
pitcher in his place. And when each man batted, Joe would hold that
ball in his hands. So—”
Stan Soames broke off abruptly and hid his face in
his bandanna. His chest hitched twice, and Sam could see his throat
locked against a sob. Then he wiped his eyes again and stuffed the
bandanna briskly into his back pocket.
“So now you know why I took you two to Des Moines
today, and why I would have taken you to New York to pick up those
two books if that’s where you’d needed to go. It wasn’t my treat;
it was Dave’s. He’s a special sort of man.”
“I think maybe you are, too,” Sam said.
Soames gave him a smile—a strange, crooked
smile—and opened the door of Dawson’s Buick. “Well, thank you,” he
said. “Thank you kindly. And now I think we ought to be rolling
along if we want to beat the rain. Don’t forget your books, Miss
Higgins.”
“I won’t,” Naomi said as she got out with the top
of the bag wrapped tightly in one hand. “Believe me, I
won’t.”