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Parker dropped him off at the Depresso. "Thanks for the raise."
"You earned it, Patrick. See you in the morning."
Patrick skipped down the stone steps to the Depresso patio. Willow was reading at a table, leaning back, her long legs stretched out before her, crossed at the ankles.
"Hey, Willow."
"h.e.l.lo, Patrick. Hungry already?"
Patrick patted his stomach. "You make great sandwiches, but--I'm celebrating. I got a raise."
"Impressive," Willow said.
"I'll tell you about it, if you'd like. But I've got to get a beer.
Want one?"
"No thanks."
Patrick returned with a Heineken, his new favorite. "Yeah, I finished a house and garage up on the mountain. The Van Slyke's. Do you know them?" Willow shook her head, no. "He's a painter, and she's a--looker.
He showed me his studio. Do you know what art is, Willow?"
"G.o.d, Patrick," she said.
"What's the matter?"
"You ask the most amazing questions."
"Well, I asked Hendrik--Mr. Van Slyke--and he showed me his studio."
"Modest Hendrik."
"He was modest, in a frustrated way. He showed me a painting that he's been working on all year. Said he couldn't get it. He said that art had to be true."
"He didn't!" Willow clapped her hand over her mouth.
Patrick looked at her. "You think I'm a moron." She took her hand away.
"I am. But I'm a persistent moron." He took a swallow of beer. "True,"
he said. "I know about true. In science, what is true can be verified.
What is true, is true for everybody. But Hendrik's true is only true for Hendrik."
"Especially true for Hendrik," Willow said.
"So, it's a different kind of true," Patrick finished.
"Different from science," Willow said, "but useful."
"Useful . . . " Patrick thought.
"Like Beethoven or Dylan true," she said.
Patrick watched people on the sidewalk. "There's more," he said, after a moment. "There's more about this art and science stuff. I don't understand it, yet. What's the matter?" he asked for the second time.
Willow was wiping tears from her cheeks.
"It's not your fault," she said. She stood suddenly. "I'm going now."
She pedaled away with her book in the basket. What did I say? he wondered. He went inside scratching his head. Sue and Jim were at the bar. He thought about his usual dinner of rice and vegetables. To h.e.l.l with it. Deanie's, he said to himself and went back outside. Willow was gone.
He walked past the News Shop and Ann's Deli and turned down the hill to Deanie's for a celebratory steak, still wondering what had upset Willow. The dining room was comfortably filled, cheerful without being noisy. A bar stretched the length of one end of the room. Sam was there by himself and said h.e.l.lo. Patrick excused himself as soon as he could and sat at a small table on the other side of the room. Sam was always mouthing off about the government and asking everyone where he could score some gra.s.s. He was nervous in a way that put Patrick off. Patrick didn't want to ha.s.sle with anyone who worked for Parker, so he kept his mouth shut and avoided him. "Meat," he said to Sam. "I've got this craving for meat. Got to have it!"
"Yeah, man." Sam's eyes darted around as Patrick escaped.
"Medium rare," Patrick ordered, and, by G.o.d, that's what he was served.
Delicious. He ate slowly, each bite a mini-ceremony. Eating out was important to Patrick. While he was working, he worked hard, concentrating. Dinner was a time to relax, to think, and to look around. He enjoyed being in the midst of people without necessarily having to talk to anyone. The Deanie's crowd was straighter than the Depresso crowd. IBM'rs and local business people mixed with musicians and artists. The waitresses were middle-aged. The pies were particularly good.
This was Patrick's third dinner at Deanie's. He was beginning to feel more at home in Woodstock. His landlady, Gert, had become more friendly. Patrick was willing to help with little things around the house, that probably had something to do with it. She was a reader, too, he'd discovered. They talked about books. The other day, he'd asked her what she was reading.
"Every story is a love story, isn't it, Patrick?" She had chuckled comfortably and continued reading. He didn't know what to make of that.
Did she mean every story about anything? Or every story a writer felt was worth the effort? She had said it as though it were self evident, as though he shouldn't be pestering her for an explanation. Or maybe he was supposed to figure it out for himself.
"Wonderful pie," he said to the waitress.
"We make a lot of them," she said. Patrick left a big tip and walked slowly toward home. He had an urge for a Hershey bar as he pa.s.sed Ann's. Ann took his change without comment.
"Willow makes a good sandwich," he said.
"You like her, don't you," she said accusingly. He didn't know what to say. Ann glared at him. "You young people think we don't feel anything.
Well, you're wrong. What's your name?"
"Patrick."
"We have feelings, too. You think we weren't young once?"
"Sorry," he said, unsure. "Night." He moved toward the door.
"Remember that, Patrick," she flung at his back. Another upset woman.
What was getting into everybody? He looked into the window of the Depresso. Sue and Jim weren't there. The Go player who had annoyed him on his first night in town was sitting on a stool in a corner, playing a banjo. The metallic beat followed him a short distance up Tinker Street, a sort of urban bluegra.s.s. It was a relief to go quietly to bed with his book on mathematics.
The next morning it was pouring. Patrick trudged to the News Shop, where Parker declared a washout. Gino, as senior man, got to work on an inside job. Everyone else was off for the day. The group milled around, joking with a drunk who kept coming in and out, clapping people on the back, breathing beer fumes in their faces, and saying, "How ya doing, buddy? How ya doing? That good, huh? Ha, ha, ha."
"Good to see you, Billy. Good to see you."
"So who's this?" he asked, putting one arm around Wilson and the other around Patrick.
"Patrick, Billy. This is Patrick."
"Top o' the mornin', Patrick." Patrick found himself laughing along with him.
"By Jesus," he said, "top o' the mornin' to you, too." They were leaving. Billy escorted them to the open doorway.