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That Old Cape Magic

That Old Cape Magic

Titel: That Old Cape Magic Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Richard Russo
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large, was oddly asymmetrical, like it might contain a large fibroid cyst. For his part Tommy pretended not to notice that Griffin seldom slept for more than three or four hours. He himself got up to pee half a dozen times every night and sometimes poked his head into the living room, where Griffin would be watching television with the sound down. They were, that is, careful, as if consideration and not honesty was the bedrock of true friendship.
    In this fashion the summer limped along. When Griffin arrived, they’d moved Tommy’s desktop from the guest bedroom to the dining room, and it was here they convened each morning. Tommy always brought in a pot of coffee from the kitchen, and Griffin would print out two sets of the last couple of days’ worth of work, which for continuity’s sake they always read over before beginninga new scene. One morning Griffin looked up from his pages to see Tommy studying him with a mixture of sadness and irritation. “Griff,” he said, “do us both a favor. Go home.”
    “Another week and a half and we’ll have a draft.”
    “Fuck the draft. You’re miserable. And you’re hurting that woman.”
    “You don’t know that.”
    “I know
her
. And what about your daughter?”
    Laura, in fact, was not taking it well. She’d called him twice in L.A., wanting to know what was going on. What she’d worried about most of her life was finally happening, even as she and Andy were planning their own wedding. He’d tried to comfort her, saying that he and her mother hadn’t decided anything yet, but the only thing that would really comfort her was for him to go home and resume his old life, to pretend nothing had happened in Wellfleet.
    Two weeks later, in mid-August, he and Tommy turned the draft in to Ruby Hand. They both thought it stank but were of different minds about what was wrong with it, agreeing only about two things: that the script was unlikely to get better without additional input and that their producer was an even bigger dickhead than they remembered. Good luck getting valuable notes from him. He was prompt, though, give him that. He called the very next day, when Tommy was out. He’d read the script and thought it was definitely “a step in the right direction.” How about they all think about it for a few days and exchange notes later in the week?
    “That’s that, then,” Tommy said when Griffin told him about the conversation.
    “What do you mean?”
    “God, have you really been gone that long? That ‘step in the right direction’ jazz is code.”
    “You think we’re fired?”
    “No, I know we’re fired.”
    He’d always had an almost preternatural gift for knowing whenthe ax was about to fall, but in this instance Griffin wasn’t sure he agreed. “Our contract calls for a polish.”
    “He’s going to eat the polish, Griff. Trust me, we’re shitcanned. You might as well pack your bags.”
    Griffin decided to come clean. “I called the college last week,” he said, “and they’re granting me a year’s leave.”
    Tommy nodded, then shook his head. “Joy knows about this?”
    “Possibly. There aren’t many secrets in small colleges.”
    “But
you
haven’t told her.”
    “Not yet, though it won’t be a surprise. She predicted it, in fact. Also, I might’ve found an apartment.”
    Tommy just sighed.
    “I’ve stayed too long,” Griffin said. “If we land another gig, maybe we could rent a small office.”
    Later that week, both their cells rang at the same moment. Griffin’s said MOM CALLING , so he took it outside onto the patio. He’d been in L.A. a week before remembering his promise to visit and bring her the books and journals she wanted. “Maybe I can find what you need out here,” he’d offered, after telling her where he was and why, or at least the small part he wanted her to know. “August is soon enough,” she’d told him, confirming his earlier suspicion that she didn’t need them to begin with. Their conversation had been short, suspiciously so, he thought. It was almost as if she was relieved he wouldn’t be coming to see her as planned. Nor had she called him since, which was stranger still. For her, summer was open season for pestering.
    “Mom,” he said now, “how are you?”
    But it wasn’t his mother. The woman identified herself as Gladys, her next-door neighbor. She’d become concerned when Mary didn’t answer her knock that morning. They were on the buddy system, Gladys explained, which

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