by Bill Scheft
The Ringer
A Novel by
Bill Scheft
For Adrianne
Quare habe tibi quidquid hoc libelli
Qualecumque, quod, o patrona virgo,
Plus uno maneat perenne saeclo.
CATULLUS I, 8–10
Beethoven was so deaf, he thought he was painting.
RIP TAYLOR
“Well, what about it, Jim? Are you ready to cut out the yelling and play ball?”
JOE CRONIN,
from the movie Fear Strikes Out
Contents
Epigraph
Part One
1
Don’t flush too early. He always had to remind himself.
2
Man, these guys worked fast. Ten minutes from the time…
3
“Help me out here. What golf course is this again?”
4
“Get down! Get down!”
5
(Ring)
6
“You know, they just released the official figures. Forty-six Americans…
7
So this was what they meant by slowing down. You…
8
“Before we get into the situation with your uncle, I’d…
9
When he finally put the key in the bottom lock,…
10
“You’re looking awfully well today.”
11
“And now it’s time for a brand new feature on…
12
If anyone asked College Boy what happened to his arm,…
13
“You the nephew?”
14
College Boy was bone weary from what had turned out…
Part Two
15
If your goal is to be left alone, nothing will…
16
Just after the first of the year, as his condition…
17
Before things changed, then really changed, the only ritual Sheila…
18
The sign read: EIGHT BALLS—ONE DOLLAR.
19
Just after her workout and just before she left New…
20
In the last seven months, breakfast alone was the closest…
21
Dr. Michael Zing was the best kind of bald man.
22
I’ll stay twenty minutes, she decided. Fifteen minutes. Ten minutes,…
23
“…coming up in the next hour after the news, Bob…
24
The woman behind the counter told him if he wanted…
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Praise
Copyright
About the Publisher
Part One
1
Don’t flush too early. He always had to remind himself. At least make it seem like you’re taking a piss.
As scores went, this was pretty good. Fifteen yellows, ten light blues. Enough to extend his stash at home for a couple of weeks, until the next time he and his uncle would meet for dinner. How could he do this to his uncle, a man he so clearly admired? A family member whose company he actually enjoyed? A man who lived a life to which he could only aspire?
Simple. Volume.
Don’t flush too early.
He turned off the water and dawdled a bit, as he always did, to read the label on each decidedly non-child-proof-capped bottle. The Tower Chemists Gazette.
5/14/91
M.M. Spell
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE.
TAKE THREE (3) AT NIGHT BEFORE
BED AS DIRECTED.
60
Valium 10 mg.
DR. Levitz
Refills: 4
4/10/91
M.M. Spell
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE.
TAKE UP TO SIX (6) AT NIGHT BEFORE
BED AS NEEDED.
120
Valium 5 mg.
DR. Levitz
Refills: 3
“Now there,” he thought as he always thought. “There’s a guy with a problem.”
He flushed. He reran the water. Then he jostled a hand towel.
“Nice going, College Boy.”
The neck was still a little cranky from the Riis Park doubleheader, which had ended three hours ago. He considered banging back a five-milligram yellow now and getting a head start with the healing process, then decided against it. The second bourbon with the uncle would do just as well. Then the yellow for dessert.
“Okay, ready to go.”
“Let me hop in there, doctor.” His uncle sidestepped into the bathroom and made a move for the medicine cabinet before becoming distracted by the mirror. Phew. He adjusted the brim on his cap. Herringbone. Brown. Wool. Heavy, heavy wool. It almost went with the gray herringbone sportcoat. Wool. Slightly less heavy wool. A week to go until Memorial Day. The end of the heavy wool season for those who observed such things. Other people.
He walked out toward the door and stopped to pat the shoulders of his nephew’s blazer with both hands.
“Nice padding, kid. Looks like you have enough in there for Arafat’s winter headquarters.” How long had his uncle been doing the “padding” line on him? At least twenty-five years. The tenants had changed as history dictated—Nasser, Batista, Le Duc Tho, Bani-Sadr—but there was always someone in the shoulders of his jacket, and it was always their “winter headquarters.”
And he always laughed, even though he hadn’t been a kid for almost twenty years. “Good one, Mort.” It was the least he could do for a single, childless, seventy-five-year-old man whose idea of the family dynamic was not asking for help with the dinner check. Come to think of it, it was his idea, too. “Hey, where are we going, Ruc?”
“I think they’re expecting us at P. J.’s.”
He couldn’t mean P. J. Moriarty’s, the great chop hangout once three blocks away. The site of ninety percent of their dinners his first four years in New York until it had closed in 1982, three years before his first Valium heist. His uncle couldn’t mean that P. J. Moriarty’s.
“Do you mean P. J. Clarke’s?”
“Christ no. I might bump into Gifford, and I’m all out of compliments. No, Moriarty’s.”
Do something. “Mort, aren’t they closed? Some renovation?”
“Renovation, my ass,” his uncle confided with the back of his hand to the side of his mouth, “I bet that haircut Lindsay rented the back room to look at cufflinks.”
“Mayor Lindsay?”
“Ah, yes, quite. We should talk about him at dinner. I thought we’d go to Ruc. That seems to work out damn well for us.”
“Fine.” Whatever that had been was over. Seventy-five years old. It happens. “Ready to go?”
“What time do you have?”
“Seven twenty-five.”
“Let’s watch Vanna come out.”
“Mort, it’s Sunday.”
“You’re right on it tonight, kid, aren’t you? How’s the performing, acting, whatever it is that keeps you these days?”
“Well, you know.”
“I think I do.”
Now the door. Forty years at 301 East Sixty-fifth Street, and the apartment door and its locks still proved positively Gordian for his uncle. And he knew better than to offer his help. He did, however, move the large suitcase that was blocking Mort’s angle of disarmament.
“You going away, Mort?”
“No.”
“That’s right, you are. This week. To get that award in L. A.”
“The Dottie Sussman Breach of Confidentiality Ribbon. Don’t rub it in.”
“You don’t like this fuss, do you?”
His uncle grabbed the knob for traction and the front door popped open.
�
�Well, that was too easy.”
“Mort, I gotta go to the john again. Sorry.”
He broke all his rules. He didn’t run the water. He popped a yellow on an empty stomach and before a few drinks. He did not save it for dessert after the Prague Roast at Ruc.
And he flushed way, way too early.
“Let’s go, doctor. Vanna is waiting.”
And it didn’t matter.
2
Man, these guys worked fast. Ten minutes from the time she had called, they were here at the apartment. Five minutes to revive the old man and get him on the gurney, or whatever that collapsible tea cart with straps was called. Now things had slowed to on-hold time, as the taller one, Jeff, was on the bedroom phone, waiting to hear where they were supposed to take the old man now that the ER at Lenox Hill was stacked up like Newark.
“We should be hearing soon,” said the shorter one, Mark or Matt. “Mount Sinai probably.”
“Great. So, you’re sure he’s okay until then?”
“He’s getting fluids and we got his pressure back to where he can travel.” He patted the gurney. These guys all look like firemen. “It’s a little, ah, messy, there where we picked him up off the floor.”
She glanced over and saw blood, shit, piss, and what looked like a crushed pep-o-mint Life Saver. “Don’t worry. It’s nothing I haven’t dealt with before.”
Sheila, forever in check, finally gave her insides permission to calm down. She unfastened the belt on her white linen trenchcoat and thought about heading into the bathroom to change into her work clothes and, if the lighting and ambience was just right, throw up. She hung her great red head and briefly cracked herself up with some old cartoon she had remembered. A couple picnicking next to a dead guy covered in a checkered tablecloth as paramedics rushed in. How many times do I have to tell you? I said ambience! Ambience! Not ambulance!
Mark or Matt caught the outside corner of her quick smile to herself and the sniff of what might be construed as brave worry. He couldn’t miss it. He was staring. Nothing new for Sheila, the staring. First time, though, it had ever come from an EMT in the middle of a gig.
She straightened up and tossed the coat onto the wing chair. She had on the short, black cocktail dress. Which meant one thing and one thing only. It was Laundry Day. The old man had seen her a couple of times in the black dress and become uncharacteristically lunge-ful. She’d thought it was safe to wear today because she hadn’t been expecting to find him back from California on Thursday. Which meant she hadn’t expected him lying facedown on the living room rug. But he hadn’t seen the dress. What a break.
“Hey, nice dress. What is that, cotton?”
“Ah, yeah.” Not with this guy, she thought. Not now.
Sheila had discovered Mort sprawled on the rug only after she had pulled the vacuum out of the front closet. Seventeen minutes ago. At first, he was just in her way. Then she realized that had not been his intent.
“Too bad about your…uh…father?”
“No.”
“Uncle?”
“Ah, no.”
“Grandfather, right?”
“Jesus.”
“What?”
“I told you. I told you both when you got here. I’m Mr. Spell’s cleaning woman. That’s how I found him. Today’s my day. To fucking clean.”
“You don’t look like any cleaning woman that I’ve seen.”
“Hey, what can I tell you? I’m not in my working clothes.”
“What you’ve got on is working for me.”
She yanked open the door. “Get the fuck out of here, asshole. And you better take care of him. Take him the fuck out into the hall and wait for your buddy.”
Mark or Matt gave her a weak smile as he pushed the old man hallward. He coughed. “Sorry.”
“You couldn’t afford me, pal. As a cleaning woman.” Sheila saw he wasn’t lingering over her odd syntax. And so, she softened. “I’ll be up to see you, Mr. Spell. Mort,” she said to the disappearing blankness behind the oxygen cone.
The taller one, Jeff, emerged from the bedroom.
“It’s Sinai.”
“Good,” she said.
“Where’s Marty?”
“Out in the hall.”
“Was he bothering you, miss? Because”—Jeff braced his left hand against the door jamb, as if creating a hypothetical booth for himself and Sheila—“if he’s a problem, I’ll take care of it. Because I can do that.”
“I appreciate it.”
“Because I wouldn’t do it for everyone.”
“You boys don’t take the ‘emergency’ part of your title very seriously.”
“Oh, I’m serious.”
“Mark?”
“Jeff.”
“Jeff, take Mr. Spell to fucking Sinai before my next 911 call is for you.”
There is a thing some women can do to men using only their eyes. Something—almost—like chemical castration. Well, Sheila Manning was one of those women.
“Marty, Sinai. Stat!”
These guys worked fast.
3
“Help me out here. What golf course is this again?”
The nurse answered the question as politely as she had the first ten times. “Mount Sinai Hospital, Mr. Spell.”
“Thank you for coming up with that so quickly. And what fairway is that out there? The 16th?”
“Fifth Avenue.”
“Right, the 5th. Is everyone here as knowledgeable as you?”
Morton Martin Spell, as his byline read, was delirious. Being delirious was not in Mort’s plans. But this was Day Three and he was still quite good at it. If Mort Spell had been talking to himself, which he wasn’t, thank God, he would have said, “You’re really quite good at being delirious.” No, that’s wrong. He would have said that if he had been another person. Mort Spell only had a limitless supply of flattery for everyone else. Especially a woman who kept sweetly telling him where he was and where he wasn’t.
“You’re looking awfully well today.”
“Thank you, Mr. Spell.”
“Is the pro coming by this afternoon?”
“You mean the doctor? Yes.”
“Good! I have to thank him. I really think these straps are going to help my swing.”
Compliments and accolades only worked in one direction. Away from Morton Martin Spell. Five days ago, he had flown to Los Angeles to finally receive an award in person. Six thousand miles, two falls, and a full catheter later, here he was, overlooking the 16th fairway. No, the 5th.
The Bertram Hargan Cup was presented every four years to that athlete, coach, executive, broadcaster, or writer who “embodies the essence and ideals of American sport which Bertram Hargan so cherished.” Very prestigious. The last four winners had been Olympic decathlon champion Rafer Johnson (1975), Pittsburgh Steelers owner Art Rooney (1979), Howard Cosell (1983), and the late Bertram Hargan (1987). “I guess they ran out of dead people” was Mort Spell’s explanation. Everybody, including his nephew, the actor, said he should open his acceptance speech with that line. But Mort would never say such a thing. He’d be more comfortable turning to a portrait of the late Bertram Hargan and saying, “You’re looking awfully well today.”
The Crosby piece. That’s why they were giving it to him. Sure, the Hargan Cup people had mumbled something on paper about his body of work, but when you’re seventy-five years old and some cocktail jockey uses the phrase “body of work,” you know what you’re dealing with. You’re dealing with a guy who knows your work only as a signpost in a table of contents. The piece he has to riffle through on the way to his real destination—some snap, crackle, pap about Keith Hernandez correcting a flaw in his stance after dinner with Marsha Mason. This guy, Brent or Connor or Theron, something like that, who, when he finally meets you at the award dinner, will say something like—no exactly like—“Every month, when the New Yorker comes out, I look for your articles.” And you can’t say, “I don’t write for the New Yorker anymore. And it’s a weekl
y, you putz.” Which is why Morton Martin Spell didn’t accept awards in person.
He hadn’t contributed to the New Yorker since 1982, shortly before Reagan had deregulated the ten-thousand-word magazine piece. He had moved across the street to the fledgling biweekly Civilized Man as its “Sports Historian in Residence.” That’s what the masthead and everyone else started calling him. Sports Historian Morton Martin Spell. That’s when the awards started coming. That’s when he started not showing up.
“What does someone like Wayne Gretzky say when you introduce yourself?” his nephew had asked not too long ago.
“He says, ‘get me that guy from Newsweek.’”
Sports Historian. There weren’t even the letters to make the word “writer.” Was there any phrase more odious to Mort Spell? You know, other than “body of work?”
But he was seventy-five years old and it was for the Crosby piece and Bing would be pissed off if he didn’t show. And, if you count Bertram Hargan, that would be two dead guys angry with him.
“Would it be possible not to have that large black woman visit me again today?”
“Mr. Spell, no one has been in here all day.”
“There was a large black woman in here talking to me an hour ago. Around four o’clock.”
“Was it Oprah Winfrey?”
“Yes. Is she a friend of yours?”
“No.”
“Good. You’re well rid of her.”
He had originally written “Bing Crosby: Sportsman” for the Atlantic Monthly—now that would be a monthly—in 1983. It was a bit of a departure from the standard Morton Martin Spell archival forced march across the legacy of the shuttlecock or the Abe Stark sign at Ebbets Field. First of all, it was a mere five thousand words. Second, it was personal. A re-creation of thirty hours he spent with the singer/movie star/corporation on an otherwise faceless day in 1947. It started at 8:00 A.M. as a round of golf in Palm Springs. Bing was looking for someone to ghostwrite a book of links lies. All Bing had was the title—“Golfing My Way.”