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<h1><span style="font-size: 173%">9</span></h1>
<div class="tei-figure"><ANTIMG src="images/image09.png" width-obs="483" height-obs="450" alt="Illustration: Dave and Tom sitting on front steps with Cat." /></div>
<p>That operation didn’t make as much difference
to Cat as you might think. I took him back to
the clinic to get the stitches out of his leg and
the bandages off. A few nights later I heard
yowls coming up from the backyard. I went
down and pulled him out of a fight. He wasn’t
hurt yet, but he sure was right back in there
pitching. He seems to have a standing feud
with the cat next door.</p>
<p>However, he’s been coming home nights regularly,
and sometimes in the cool part of the
morning he’ll sit out on the front stoop with
me. He sits on a pillar about six feet above the
sidewalk, and I sit on the steps and play my
transistor and read.</p>
<p>Every time a dog gets walked down the street
under Cat’s perch, he gathers himself up in a
ball, as if he were going to spring. Of course,
the poor dog never knows it was about to be
pounced on and wags on down the street. Cat
lets his tail go to sleep then and sneers.</p>
<p>Between weathercasts I hear him purring,
loud rumbly purrs, and I look up and see Tom
there, stroking Cat’s fur up backward toward
his ears. Tom is looking out into the street and
sort of whistling without making any sound.</p>
<p>“Gee, hi!” I say.</p>
<p>“Hi, too,” he says. He strokes Cat back down
the right way, gives him a pat, and sits down.
“I just been down to see your dad. He’s quite
a guy.”</p>
<p>“Huh-h-h? You got sunstroke or something?
Didn’t he read you about ten lectures on
Healthy Living, Honest Effort, Baseball, and
Long Walks with a Dog?”</p>
<p>“No-o-o.” Tom grins, but then he sits and
stares out at the street again, so I wait.</p>
<p>“You know,” he says, “you give me an idea.
<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">You</span></span> talk like <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">your</span></span> dad is a real pain, and that’s
the way <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">I</span></span> always have felt about <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">mine</span></span>. But your
dad looks like a great guy to me, so—well, maybe
mine could be too, if I gave him a chance. Your
dad was saying I should.”</p>
<p>“Should what? You should go home?”</p>
<p>“No. Your dad said I ought to write him a
long letter and face up to all the things I’ve
goofed on. Quitting NYU, the cellar trouble,
all that. Then tell him I’m going to get a job
and go to night school. Your dad figures probably
he’d help me. He said he’d write him, too.
No reason he should. I’m nothing in his life.
It’s pretty nice of him.”</p>
<p>I try to digest all this, and it sure is puzzling.
The time I ran down that crumb of a doorman
on my bike, accidental on purpose, I didn’t get
any long understanding talks. I just got kept in
for a month.</p>
<p>Tom slaps me in the middle of the back and
stands up. “Hilda’s gone back to work at the
coffee shop. I guess I’ll go down and see her
before the lunch rush, and then go home and
write my letter.”</p>
<p>“Say ‘Hi’ for me.”</p>
<p>“O.K. So long.”</p>
<div class="tei tei-tb">* * * * * </div>
<p>The weather cools off some, and Pop starts to
talk about vacation. He’s taking two weeks, last
of August and first of September, so I start shopping
around for various bits of fishing tackle and
picnic gear we might need. We’re going to this
lake up in Connecticut, where we get a sort of
motel cottage. It has a little hot plate for making
coffee in the morning, but most of the rest of the
time we eat out, which is neat.</p>
<p>We’re sitting around the living room one
evening, sorting stuff out, when the doorbell
rings. I go answer it, and Tom walks in. He nods
at me like he hardly sees me and comes into the
living room. He shakes hands like a wooden
Indian. His face looks shut up again, the way
it did that day I left him in the filling station.</p>
<p>He reaches in his pocket and pulls out a letter.
I can see a post-office stamp in red ink with
a pointing hand by the address. He throws it
down on Dad’s table.</p>
<p>“I got my answer all right.”</p>
<p>Pop looks at the letter and I see his foot start
to twitch the way it does when he’s about to
blow. But he looks at Tom, and instead of blowing
he just says, “Your father left town? No forwarding
address?”</p>
<p>“I guess so. He just left. Him and that woman
he married.” Tom’s voice trails off and he walks
over to the window. We all sit quiet a minute.</p>
<p>Finally Pop says gently, “Well, don’t waste
too much breath on her. She’s nothing to do
with you.”</p>
<p>Tom turns around angrily. “She’s no good.
She loafs around and drinks all the time. She
talked him into going.”</p>
<p>“And he went.” There’s another short silence,
and Pop goes on. “Where was this you lived?”</p>
<p>“House. It was a pretty nice little house, too.
Dark red with white trim, and enough of a yard
to play a little ball, and I grew a few lettuces
every spring. I even got one ear of corn once.
We moved there when I was in second grade
because my mom said it was near a good local
school. I lived there till I went to college. I suppose
he sold it, or got a loan, and they lit off to
drink it up. Soon’s they’d got <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">me</span></span> off their
hands.”</p>
<p>Tom bites off the last word. Suddenly I can
see the picture pretty clear: the nice house, the
father Tom always talked down and hoped
would measure up. Now it’s like somebody has
taken his whole childhood and crumpled it up
like a wad of tissue paper and thrown it away.</p>
<p>Mom gets up and goes into the kitchen. Pop’s
foot keeps on twitching. Finally he says, “Well,
I steered you wrong. I’m sorry. But maybe it’s
just as well to have it settled.”</p>
<p>“It’s settled, all right,” Tom says.</p>
<p>Mom brings out a tray of ginger-ale glasses.
It seems sort of inadequate at a moment like
this, but when Tom takes a glass from her he
looks like he’s going to bust out crying.</p>
<p>He drinks some and blows his nose, and Dad
says, “When are you supposed to check in with
the Youth Board again?”</p>
<p>“Tuesday. My day off. And I wind up the
filling-station job the next week, right after Labor
Day.”</p>
<p>“Labor Day. Hm-m. We’ve got to get moving.
If you like, I’ll come down to the Youth Board
with you, and we’ll see what we can all cook up.
Don’t worry too much. I have a feeling you’re
just beginning to fight—really fight, not just
throw a few stones.”</p>
<p>“I don’t know why you bother.” Tom starts
to stand up. But while we’ve been talking, Cat
has been creeping up under the side table, playing
the ambush game, and he launches himself
at Tom just as he starts to stand. It throws him
off balance and he sits back in the chair, holding
Cat.</p>
<p>“You’ve got nothing to worry about,” Pop
says. “Cat’s on your side.”</p>
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