door from which he would never emerge, made him feel selfish and ashamed.
He tried to concentrate on the exercise show but found no solace in spandex tights. He rose and turned off the TV. He went to the kitchen and put his coffee in the sink. Outside the window the hummingbirds went about their business, shimmering in the morning sun. A sense of urgency came over him. It became suddenly very important to get to his workshop and finish his latest carving. Time seemed as fleeting and fragile as the little birds. In his younger days he might have met the feeling with a naive denial of his own mortality. Age had given him a different defense, and his thoughts returned to the image of he and the wife going to bed together and never waking, their lives and memories going out all at once. This too, he knew, was a naive fantasy. When the wife got home he was going to give her hell for going away, he knew that for sure.
Before unlocking his workshop he set the alarm on his watch to go off at lunchtime. If he worked through lunch he might miss his nap. There was no sense in wasting the day just because the wife was out of town.
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When the knock came on his workshop door, Effrom thought at first that the wife had come home early to surprise him with lunch. He ground out his cigarette in an empty toolbox that he kept for that purpose. He blew the last lungful of smoke into the exhaust fan he had installed âto take out the sawdust.â
âComing. Just a minute,â he said. He revved up one of his high-speed polishing tools for effect. The knocking continued and Effrom realized that it was not coming from the inside door that the wife usually knocked on, but from the one leading out into the front yard. Probably Jehovahâs Witnesses . He climbed down from his stool, checked the pockets of his corduroys for quarters, and found one. If you bought a Watchtower from them, they would go away, but if they caught you without spare change, they would be on you like soul-saving terriers.
Effrom threw the door open and the young man outside jumpedback. He was dressed in a black sweatshirt and jeansârather casual, Effrom thought, for someone carrying the formal invitation to the end of the world.
âAre you Effrom Elliot?â he asked.
âI am.â Effrom said. He held out his quarter. âThanks for stopping by, but Iâm busy, so you can just give me my Watchtower and Iâll read it later.â
âMr. Elliot, Iâm not a Jehovahâs Witness.â
âWell, I have all the insurance I can afford, but if you leave me your card, Iâll give it to the wife.â
âIs your wife still alive, Mr. Elliot?â
âOf course sheâs alive. What did you think? I was going to tape your business card to her tombstone? Son, youâre not cut out to be a salesman. You should get an honest job.â
âIâm not a salesman, Mr. Elliot. Iâm an old friend of your wifeâs. I need to talk to her. Itâs very important.â
âShe ainât home.â
âYour wifeâs name is Amanda, right?â
âThatâs right. But donât you try any of your sneaky tricks. You ainât no friend of the wife or Iâd know you. And we got a vacuum cleaner thatâd suck the hide off a bear, so go away.â Effrom started to close the door.
âNo, please, Mr. Elliot. I really need to speak to your wife.â
âShe ainât home.â
âWhen will she be home?â
âSheâs coming home tomorrow. But Iâm warning you, son, sheâs even tougher than I am on flimflam men. Mean as a snake. Youâd be best to just pack up your carpetbag and go look for honest work.â
âYou were a World War One veteran, werenât you?â
âI was. What of it?â
âThank you, Mr. Elliot. Iâll be back tomorrow.â
âDonât bother.â
âThank you, Mr. Elliot.â
Effrom slammed the
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