it wanted one or if there was something wrong. I had some kind of an intestinal infection that year, and I was the block expert on enemas.
"Oh," he said.
"We went over one Sunday when they weren't working and it was a lot like this, very quiet, like a corpse that died in bed. They had part of the foundations laid, and there were all of these yellow metal things sticking out of the cement-"
"Core rods."
"Whatever. And there was lots of pipe and bundles of wire covered with clear plastic wrap and there was a lot of raw dirt around. Funny to think of it that way, whoever heard of cooked dirt, but that's how it looked. Just raw. We played hide-and-go-seek around the place and my mother came over and got us and gave me and my sister hell for it. She said little kids can get into bad trouble around construction. My little sister was only four and she cried her head off. Funny to re-member all that. Can we get back in the car now? I'm cold.
"Sure," he said, and they did.
As they drove on she said: "I never thought they'd have anything out of that place but a mess. Then pretty soon the shopping center was all there. I can remember the day they hot-topped the parking lot. And a few days after that some men came with a little push-wagon and made all the yellow parking lines. Then they had a big party and some hot-shit cut a ribbon and everybody started using it and it was just like they never built it. The name of the big department store was Mammoth Mart, and my mom used to go there a lot. Sometimes when Angie and I were with her I'd think of all those orange rods sticking through the cement down in the basement. It was like a secret thought."
He nodded. He knew about secret thoughts.
"What does it mean to you?" she asked.
"I'm still trying to figure that out," he said.
He was going to make TV dinners, but she looked in the freezer and saw the roast and said she'd fix it if he didn't mind waiting for it to cook.
"Sure," he said. "I didn't know how long to cook it or even what temperature."
"Do you miss your wife?"
"Like hell."
"Because you don't know how to cook the roast?" she asked, and he didn't answer that. She baked potatoes and cooked frozen corn. They ate in the breakfast nook and she ate four thick slices of the roast, two potatoes, and two helpings of the corn.
"I haven't eaten like that in a year," she said, lighting a cigarette and looking into her empty plate. "I'll probably heave my guts."
"What have you been eating?"
"Animal crackers."
"What?"
"Animal crackers."
"I thought that's what you said."
"They're cheap," she said. "And they fill you up. They've got a lot of nutrients and stuff, too. It says so right on the box."
"Nutrients my ass. You're getting zits, girl. You're too old for those. Come here."
He led her into the dining room and opened Mary's china cupboard. He took out a silver serving dish and pulled a thick pile of paper money out of it. Her eyes widened.
"Who'd you off, mister?"
"I offed my insurance policy. Here. Here's two hundred bucks. Eat on it."
But she didn't touch the money. "You're nuts," she said. "What do you think I'm going to do to you for two hundred dollars?"
"Nothing."
She laughed.
"All right." He put the money on the sideboard and put the silver serving dish back into the cupboard. "If you don't take it with you in the morning, I'll flush it down the john." But he didn't think he would.
She looked into his face. "You know, I think you would."
He said nothing.
"We'll see," she said. "In the morning."
"In the morning," he echoed.
He was watching "To Tell the Truth" on the television. Two of the contestants were lying about being the world's champion female bronc rider, and one was telling the truth. The panel, which included Soupy Sales, Bill Cullen, Arlene Dahl, and Kitty Carlisle, had to guess which one was telling the truth. Garry Moore, television's only three-hundred-year-old game show host, smiled and cracked jokes and dinged a bell when each panelist's time was up.
The girl was looking out the window. "Hey," she said. "Who lives on this street, anyway? All the houses look dark."
"Me and the Dankmans," he said. "And the Dankmans are moving out January fifth."
"Why?"
"The road," he said. "Would you like a drink?"
"What do you