OCR Text |
Show -218- wound through the town a t sea-level, and in the center of town they were mainly on the landward side, facing the marina and the bay. Parking his car opposite the bar, the Professor looked i t, wary of the migrant beatniks who inhabited the l i t t l e park a half-block axay, and proceded to cross the <6&e s t r e e t . Passing the wide front xrindoxr of the bar, he saw that only one ok txro stools- xrere occupied.. When he entered he noticed, txro additional parties seated a t tables in the rear. He sax; no one ho Imexr except the bartender, who was the present oxmer, and xrho came up to him, wiped the already clean bar with his rag. "Hello," he said. "Long time no see." The Professor hesitated a moment before ordering a martini. It xas a l i t t l e early, but not too early. He recalled the f i r s t years of the bar, xrhen he never came in xrithout finding one or txro people he knew. When the bar-tender brought him his drink, he asked about an old friend of his, a novelist xrho had been his student the f i r s t year he taught in the Midwest, whom he Imexr s t i l l to be one of the- regular customers. "He usually comes in about s i x - t h i r t y , " the bartender told him. The Professor knew t h i s . He had asked the question simply to make conversation. His friend xas a bachelor with regular writing and social habits. "Say?" the bartender asked him. "What the h e l l ' s going |