Nobody's Fool
left her alone to ponder them.
âAnd
you
 â¦â she told her son, but she let the sentence trail off.
Miss Beryl was still holding the letter that Sully had marked RETURN TO SENDER . She did not need to open it to know what was inside. In themetal box in her bedroom she had an entire manila folder marked âSully,â and she would add this letter to the others when she retired for the night. âIâm doing the right thing,â she said aloud to the two Clives. âSo just pipe down.â
One of the things Sully appreciated about the White Horse Tavern was that it had a window out front with a Black Label Beer sign that hadnât worked in years. That allowed Sully to peek in and see who was inside before committing himself. There were nightsâand this was one of themâwhen he didnât want to get involved. What he wanted was supper and bed. One beer might not be bad, but one had a way of leading directly to half a case. Tonight, a quick glance inside was enough to convince Sully. Wirf, predictably, was there, no doubt preparing his lecture about why Sully should stay in school, about how his going back to work would fuck everything up. Carl Roebuck, less predictably, was anchoring the near corner of the bar, a bad sign. Carl usually did his drinking and carousing in Schuyler Springs and came into The Horse only when he was looking for somebody. Usually Sully. And Sully knew that if Carl was trying to find him, heâd just as soon stay lost. True, Carl owed him for the other half of his dayâs work, but that couldnât be why he was there. Kenny, Carlâs father, had been the kind of man who went looking for people he owed, but Carl just looked for people who owed him. Maybe he was just there because he was locked out of his house, but Sully decided not to take a chance.
When Carl slid off his stool and headed for the menâs room, Sully ducked back from the window, peering in again in time to see Carl disappear into the head. Though Sullyâd never noticed it before, it occurred to him now how much Carl reminded him of his father, even though he was about half Kennyâs size and Kenny had been far too homely to be much of a ladiesâ man. Sully found himself wishing it was Kenny, not his son, who was peeing in the menâs room trough. Had it been Kenny, Sully wouldnât have minded getting involved. There was much to be said for a man who wouldnât hold it against you when you burned down his house.
The only other place that might be open at this time of night was Jerryâs Pizza a few doors down, where all the kids hung out. Normally a greasy burger at The Horse would have been preferable, but there werenât any kids hanging around Jerryâs entrance, so Sully decided to take a chance. It was Thanksgiving Eve, after all, and maybe the kids were all home and the jukebox that blared heavy metal would be silent for once. Besides, Ruthwould be working, and he was going to have to face her eventually anyway. Maybe heâd find her in a holiday mood. Maybe if he saw her heâd quit thinking about Toby Roebuck. It could happen. And it might be a good idea to find out why Jane had come over to the flat that afternoon.
Blessedly, the place was empty. Sully selected a booth out of sight from the street and far from the jukebox which, though silent, glowed red and angry, as if gathering energy and venom from the unaccustomed quiet. âSully!â a voice boomed from the kitchen. âThank God we stayed open!â
The voice belonged to Vince, who owned Jerryâs. Jerry, Vinceâs brother, ran another pizza place just like it, called Vinceâs, in Schuyler Springs. The Schuyler Springs restaurant did a better business, and whoever won the wager on the Bath-Schuyler basketball game got to run the Schuyler Springs place for the following year. By betting on his alma mater, Bath, Vince had lost the better business the last ten years in a row. Jerry always gave his brother points, but never enough of them. Both brothers were huge, burly men with more hair on their chests than their heads. They looked so much alike that over the years people had begun to confuse them, thanks to their physical resemblance and the fact that for the last ten years each had been managing the otherâs restaurant. Vince minded losing his identity a lot more than losing his restaurant to basketball wagers, and so, sensing this, Sully had
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