Read an Excerpt
Rich Boy
By Pomerantz, Sharon Twelve
Copyright © 2010 Pomerantz, Sharon
All right reserved. ISBN: 9780446563185
PART I
CHAPTER ONE
Oxford Circle
For as far as the eye could see were miles and miles of Jews, families of four, five, and more packed into long, solid-brick rows— so many ’Steins and ’Vitzes, Silvers and Golds— each house with its own narrow scroll of front lawn and a cement patio big enough for exactly two folding chairs. On Robert Vishniak’s block, the 2100 block of Disston Street in Northeast Philadelphia, an Italian family lived three houses down from him. “Italian from Italy,” his mother liked to say, born over there, unfamiliar with the lay of the land, and so no one told them until it was too late that they were buying on the wrong side of the Roosevelt Boulevard, a highway that might as well have been a river; Jews stayed west of it and Catholics east.
The area was known by residents as simply “the Northeast,” and Robert’s neighborhood was called Oxford Circle, named after a traffic circle that drivers had trouble navigating their way out of. Most of the fathers in Oxford Circle worked at government jobs or in factories, did physical labor, or owned small shops. The mothers stayed home with the children and were house proud. They hung their wet clothes on miles of line that stretched from house to house in the endless shared back driveway— the heavy canvas work shirts were spotless and the white bedsheets gleamed, as did the kitchen and bathroom floors that the women scrubbed, on their hands and knees, as if in worship.
The Vishniak family moved here in 1953. Before that, they’d lived with Robert’s grandparents, Cece and Saul Kupferberg, in a three-story row house in Southwest Philadelphia. Robert made the fourth generation to reside in that overcrowded house, yet the adults greeted the arrival of the first grandchild as if he warranted his own national holiday. Saul—who worked long hours at the tannery and came home so tired that his dinner was often served to him in bed—asked that the baby be brought to him after his last glass of tea so that he might hold him for a few minutes before bed. More than once he was found with his arms locked around the infant, both of them fast asleep. When Robert’s young uncle Frank, just a year out of high school, returned each day from his job at the supermarket, he lifted the boy into the air, parading him around the living room high above them all, where they believed he belonged. As Robert grew, his grandmother indulged him with endless homemade desserts, and his aunt Lolly, who lived just down the block and did not yet have children of her own, came over every afternoon to hold him on her lap and smother him with kisses while declaring Robert the most beautiful child she’d ever seen.
She was not completely biased in her assessment. He had a full face, with olive skin like his mother’s and straight black bangs that skimmed large brown-black eyes. On his chin and on the right but not the left cheek was a dimple that, when it chose to appear, seemed to be awarding a prize. Mostly, the boy smirked rather than smiled, as if possessing a secret that might at any moment corrupt him. Women particularly responded to his charms. When walking the child in the stroller, Stacia and Cece were often stopped by strangers who wanted to smile at him and, in Stacia’s words, “make fools of themselves.” A neighbor once took a picture, hoping to enter him in a local contest for adorable toddlers, but his mother would not hear of it—there was no cash involved, so what, Stacia asked, was the point? She was the only one who didn’t slobber over her son; for that matter, she didn’t hug or kiss most people, be they child or adult. But affection is affection, no matter where it comes from, and in Cece and Saul’s house Robert grew drunk on it.
Though Stacia worried that Robert would be spoiled, she could not deny that so many babysitters, cooks, and assistants made her life much easier. She would have been happy to live in her parents’ house forever, paying no rent and letting others fuss over her firstborn, but then, when Robert was five, Stacia had another child, Barry. The second son brought none of the novelty of a first grandchild and was a loud, colicky baby who kept the house up all night. The adults were five years older, five years more crowded and tired. Cece’s father, now age ninety-five and referred to by all as “the old man,” was still occupying the attic and showed no sign of going anywhere. Frank was as yet unmarried and remained at home. Instead of happily making room for the new baby, the family wondered where on earth they’d put him. It was not that they were unloving, or neglectful, but they went about their duties this time with significantly less enthusiasm. Then Saul got sick, and it dawned on his wife that Stacia, her husband, and their growing family might stay forever, and Saul would never be able to retire. So she kicked them out.
Stacia argued with her mother and then, for the first and only time in her life, she begged—“We haven’t saved enough for our own place; we’ll pay more into the household expenses; I’ll keep the baby quiet, I promise”—but Cece’s mind was made up. She folded her arms over her significant chest, told Stacia to get a mortgage like everyone else, and declared the decision final.
They bought the house in Oxford Circle for $6,300 with 30 percent down. Even at six years old, Robert knew those figures because Stacia Vishniak believed that hearing what things cost was good for children, like castor oil. There was a mortgage to pay now, and Vishniak, who worked at the post office during the day, began moonlighting nights and weekends as a security guard. After Barry went off to first grade, Stacia took the school crossing guard job so that she could still keep an eye on her sons after school. Mornings and afternoons she ferried the children from Solis-Cohen Elementary School safely across Bustleton Avenue. It was a strange vocation for a woman who hated automobiles, considering them wasteful and dirty. But no crossing guard was more diligent, keeping her charges in line with only a look, and holding drivers to the school-crossing speed limit, memorizing quickly the license number of anyone who infringed. Robert’s mother not only shopped for and prepared their meals and did the cleaning, washing, and general housework, but she also did all her own home repairs, fixing plumbing and unclogging drains, plastering and painting hallways and replacing light fixtures. Every other Sunday morning Stacia mowed the small front lawn with a rusty hand mower. She paid all the bills, too, squeezing twenty dollars out of each nickel. If the neighbors sometimes gossiped about her standoffishness, her plain appearance, she ignored them. No one’s opinion mattered to her but her own.
Eventually Saul died, followed by the old man. Cece sold her house and moved to an apartment near Stacia. Then the rest of the family trailed after her to Oxford Circle, so by 1960 the Vishniaks and Kupferbergs—cousins and grandparents, great-aunts and great-uncles—were once again within blocks of each other. And for a long time that was all Robert knew—the embrace of family, blocks and blocks of people who if they were not related to him, might as well have been. But he was older now, did not need them as he had in childhood. No matter, they still crowded around, wanting to be close. On the streets, he heard his name called out too many times, noticed too many familiar, familial, faces always watching him. As he grew to adolescence, preparing for the ceremony that would declare him a man, he could get away with exactly nothing and he began to yearn, more and more each year, to be a stranger.
* * *
WITH SO MANY COUSINS, Cousins Club was an event to be dreaded but not ignored. Every few months his mother and her two siblings and most of their many cousins, and sometimes all the elderly parents as well, got together at someone’s house. The system that determined who hosted was part economics and part caprice—some had it twice within a short time; others were overlooked completely. Eventually, though, when Robert was thirteen and Barry eight, the wheel stopped on Stacia and Vishniak.
His mother made the announcement at the dinner table that February. “The Cousins Club is here next month,” she said. “Even the rich cousins, back from their fancy winter vacations, are coming to look us over.”
“When was the last time we had it?” Robert asked. He could only remember his parents leaving for other people’s houses dressed in their best clothes. They returned late at night, often waking up Robert with their fights; the evenings were not without controversy.
“We’ve never had the club,” Stacia said. “When we lived with Cece we didn’t have to. Now we have our own place and we can’t escape. It’s a family obligation.”
“Jesus!” Robert’s father said, suddenly pounding his hand on the table. The boys and their mother started in their seats and then looked at him, waiting for some additional verbiage, but he went back to his mashed potatoes.
“What does the club do, Ma?” Barry asked, hoping for special passwords, or time spent in a tree house.
“They play cards for money,” Stacia said. “Too much money.”
“They eat like pigs,” his father added. “Like termites.” He paused. “They eat like the Russians are at Camden Bridge.”
“Great!” Barry said.
“It’s not great,” Robert replied, five years older and more in touch with the general sentiment. But he was desperately curious to meet the mysterious rich cousins—two of his grandmother’s nephews who’d been in the junk business, barely making ends meet, when the Second World War broke out, bringing with it the incessant demand for scrap metal. What would prosperity look like on the face of a Kupferberg? How, he wondered, were these cousins made?
By now Robert knew that the children of Cece and Saul Kupferberg, while intelligent, did not have heads for business. At one time or another, all had tried their hand at entrepreneurship and failed. The Vishniak side of his family was no better—his father’s father had a brief period of entrepreneurial success as a bootlegger during Prohibition, but then his basement still caught fire, forcing the family to make a narrow escape as the house burned almost to the ground. Stacia and Vishniak’s story, while less dangerous, was no more optimistic. Just after the war they owned a candy store in South Philadelphia. A lover of sweets, Vishniak ordered too much merchandise and gave away endless samples, carried away by his own enthusiasm, insisting that generosity brought in business. Stacia, who operated the cash register, mostly stood up front, arms folded, glowering at the freeloaders. Vishniak hired his brothers to work for him, and often one or the other sat in the back reading books for their night school classes. After three years the store went belly-up, and all Robert’s father had to show for his efforts was a bad case of diabetes and a garage full of stale Goldenberg’s Peanut Chews.
Were these rich cousins somehow constituted differently than the rest of the family? Or was it, as his mother claimed, merely luck? The rich cousins lived in the far Northeast, meaning farther north on the Roosevelt Boulevard. Even that was a mysterious place to Robert, a distant neighborhood where, he’d been told, brave settlers carved aluminum-sided single homes and a shopping mall out of a virtual wilderness.
During the month leading up to their hosting of the club, Stacia was in a terrible mood. Theirs was a loud house with two boys, but in the weeks before the cousins arrived, even Barry did not dare set anything on fire, pass wind at the dinner table, or slide down the carpeted steps on his stomach yelling, “When the hell are we finally going to buy a used car?”
Generally his mother could always be counted on to cheer up when his father returned from work with new treasure—a broken but serviceable umbrella, a man’s watch with a cracked face that still ran, a pair of barely used pantyhose, or a lady’s scarf, sometimes monogrammed, often still smelling of its owner’s perfume—all left behind by passengers on the bus or elevated train. His parents kept these collectibles in the drawers of the china cabinet in the dining room, where most people would keep their good silverware and cloth napkins. In the week before Cousins Club, Robert noticed Vishniak making a particular effort, but even when one of that week’s scarves turned out to be silk, Stacia said barely a word, her eyes scanning the living room in search of excess dust.
Stacia cleaned and vacuumed, not to please her sister or brother or mother, or even the various cousins who lived blocks away and were seen with regularity; her worry focused utterly and completely on the two rich cousins, their wives, and a third man, a brother-in-law, who was also a distant relation. In their family, out of either habit or tradition, cousins often married cousins.
The much-anticipated Saturday night arrived, and despite the constant shortage of parking on the block, the rich cousins somehow found spots in front of the house. Robert looked out the window and saw three Cadillacs in a row: pale blue, silver, and pink. His parents and aunts and uncles waited in the living room, assembled near the bay window, peering as if at a passing parade. He heard whispers of “those earrings” and “that coat” and “with all his money you’d think he could buy a better rug.”
The rich cousins burst through the door, the men first, wearing leather jackets and jingling the change in their pockets. The wives had blond hair the color of yellow corn before boiling; all three wore long furs of varying colors and patterns. They shook hands and smiled and kissed the air like movie stars as the crowd gathered around them. Barry and Robert stood by to take their coats.
After exchanging fast greetings, the men went downstairs to play poker and the women remained in the living room, sitting around a spread of food on snack tables—chopped liver and herring, creamed cheese stuffed inside olives, knishes and kishke and pumpernickel and all kinds of fruit. This was only the hors d’oeuvres. The real food came out after the men finished their game and joined them. It was a basic rule of all family functions that no one skimped on food, his mother and grandmother least of all, even if for the next six months they all ate leftovers and bought dented cans from the discount bin.
All night, Barry and Robert made trips up and down the stairs with sweaters and overcoats, but the long furs and leather jackets of the rich cousins weighed as much as all the other coats combined and needed two trips. The silk linings of the three minks smelled of cigarettes and heavy perfume. Robert put them on top of the stuff on his parents’ bed in a heap, a mountain of coats.
In the master bedroom, Barry tried to entertain Robert with his skill as a mimic. His newest impression was of an old man who lived down the block, an epileptic who a few months earlier had had a fit while walking his dog on Disston Street. The drama of the event—the barking, his wife rushing out of the house with a butter knife to put under his tongue—had been the talk of the neighborhood for weeks. At recess, Barry now fell to the ground regularly, wriggling, groaning, and foaming at the mouth to great applause from his peers; he repeated the performance for Robert that night, having achieved a kind of studied perfection through practice, but Robert was already bored with his brother’s small repertoire.
“Try someone else already! What about your gym teacher, the one who’s always got his hand down his pants? Or the cashier at Shop N’ Bag, with the lisp, who hates when Ma comes with all her coupons?”
But Barry would please only himself and fell onto the coats, cookie spit erupting from his mouth as he kicked out one leg in a series of scissorlike motions and almost tumbled off the bed.
Robert left his brother and went out into the hall, sat on the landing where no one could see anything but his feet, and listened to the hum of female chatter down below and the high-pitched exclamations of delight. Fake, he thought, all fake. With the arrival of the rich cousins, the other women, when they bothered to say anything at all, spoke in high, strangled voices. His mother was talking about how well Robert did in school, that his teacher had suggested he apply to Central, the city’s academic magnet high school. How strange to hear her talking of him this way—she never did, never called him smart or praised him in any way.
One of the rich cousins talked about a trip she’d taken to Florida and plans she and her husband had to visit South America, where gambling was legal. All the rich cousins were big gamblers, his father had told him. Was that not a lesson in itself?
Robert walked carefully down the steps to where the women sat. Aunt Lolly winked at him and spread her arms wide. When he got close to her, she smothered him against her enormous bosom. Cece took his face in her hands and kissed him wetly, and Uncle Frank’s wife pecked his cheek. Then one of the rich cousins put her hand on his arm, a small hand with long fingers, nails painted red.
“So handsooome,” she purred, clamping her fingers around his wrist, “he looks just like Monty Clift.” Finally she released him and he walked into the dining room.
“What good will his looks do him?” Stacia asked. “They won’t help him earn a living. As it is the girls run after him. Only thirteen years old and they call the house. Call the house!”
The other women laughed, though Stacia had not meant to be funny.
Robert mulled over their comments as he walked through the kitchen, stopping to pour himself a glass of orange juice. At school he’d heard his English teacher, Mrs. Markowitz, tell his history teacher, Miss Taft, that one day Robert Vishniak would be a lady-killer, a term that rang in his ears like a threat. When boys and girls had to pair up to learn square dancing in music class, four or five girls would rush to his side, so that he had to make none of the effort of the other sweating, red-faced males. Those same girls sometimes wanted him to walk them back from school, and twice he’d made out with Margie Cohen behind a tree in the school yard, and he’d liked kissing her but was uncertain what to do from there. Miss Taft, the youngest of all the teachers and the prettiest, would sometimes brush the bangs off his face and, smiling sweetly, tell him to get a haircut, even when he’d gotten one the week before. The sensation of her fingers on his forehead, and the light scratching of her fingernails, gave him a pleasurable chill. Other female teachers seemed to like to put their hands on his shoulders, giving them a momentary squeeze. Yes, women liked to touch him, but what his part was, how far he might go in response to their caresses, remained unclear.
While thinking of the mysteries of women, he descended slowly into the dark basement, the realm of men, and his feet made a hollow clomping sound on the stairs. The room was filled with cigar smoke and, as if inside a cloud, the men around the table hunched over their cards, shoulders stooped in concentration. In front of Robert’s father were only four chips. Uncle Frank had a few more chips than Vishniak, and Uncle Fred was doing the best of the three, but nothing compared to the chips in front of the three guests on the other side of the table. Robert stood behind his father, looking over his shoulder at his hand: two of hearts, two of diamonds, four of clubs, eight of spades, and a king of spades. What could Vishniak do with such a hand? From the glass next to him, Vishniak took a few sips of cherry brandy, sweet as syrup, which Robert knew he was not supposed to do, on account of his sugar. His father’s face was red, his forehead sweaty. Unlike the women, the men were mostly silent—a grunt here, a cough, a random obscenity mumbled.
Barry came down moments later eating a mandelbrot cookie, the crumbs clinging to his sweatshirt. They stood together and watched their father ask for three cards, which improved his hand only slightly, then silently throw a chip into the pot in the center of the card table. “Is he winning anything?” Barry whispered. “He’s not winning anything, is he?”
“Shut up,” Robert replied. For the first time in his life, he saw nobility in his father, who was mostly a shadow presence in his life, a sweaty mumbler of greetings who came in from work as his sons were leaving for school, was asleep by the time they did their homework and ate dinner, and left for a second job as they were going to bed. But suddenly Robert saw how his father could be strong, losing money without speech or expression, swallowing his shame.
And he wanted to help him. He stared at the cousin who was winning, at his big, shiny face, his cigar, the calm of his expression, the confidence as he upped the ante, then stopped to mop his brow with a handkerchief. Because the basement was cold—only a curtain divided this room from the garage—Stacia had felt the need to spring for two space heaters, which were surprisingly effective, and the cousin who was winning took off his sport jacket and put it over the back of his chair. Robert stared at the jacket—navy blue with a pink-and-white-striped silk lining. He’d never seen anything quite like it before. One side sagged with weight, a lump created by something in the inside pocket. A wallet, Robert thought. He keeps his wallet in his jacket, not in his pants. He can’t sit on his money because there’s too much of it.
Barry, bored with it all, had wandered over to the other end of the room, to the table where unopened bottles of liquor, the accumulation of ten years of Christmas gifts from Vishniak’s various supervisors at the U.S. Postal Service, sat on a table. Barry tried unsuccessfully to reach an open bottle but was too short. He signaled to Robert, but Robert, lost in his own thoughts, didn’t see his brother, so Barry crossed the room.
“Throw a fit,” Robert whispered.
“Now?”
“Yeah, a big one. Lots of spit. Throw your leg around like you did upstairs.”
“Whadda I get?” Barry asked. “I’m not doing it for nothing.”
“This is for Pop,” Robert said, motioning toward the game. “Think about someone else for a change.”
Vishniak had only two chips left now. He took another sip of his brandy, then pulled a handkerchief out of his pocket and mopped his brow.
“I want a drink first. The gold-colored stuff in the fancy bottle.” He pointed at the makeshift bar.
Robert went to the bar—the men oblivious, grunting and scratching, a few moans as they lay down their hands—and filled about a third of the cup with black cherry soda, Barry’s favorite. Then, as Uncle Frank dealt a new hand, Robert picked up the bottle of Crown Royal and quickly poured to the top of the cup, then replaced the cap and brought it back to Barry.
His brother tilted his head back, gulping down as much as he could, then gagged softly, and burped.
“All right, hurry up,” Robert whispered, and pushed his brother closer to the men. Barry took a deep breath, as if plunging into water, and fell to the ground, groaning and convulsing, his foot catching on a metal folding chair that hit the floor with a loud clatter. There was some commotion, a few cousins got up, but Uncle Frank and Vishniak glanced at each other with a certain understanding, and Frank shook his head, smiling to himself. The rich cousins did not even leave the table, and Robert feared his plan would not work; how could he get at the jacket if everyone refused to be distracted?
Then Barry, taking his performance to a level beyond the Method, rolled over and groaned, crawling to the poker table on all fours. When he got close, he grasped at a chair and began to pull himself to his feet. He opened his mouth, about to say something, and cherry-red vomit spewed out in a great arc, some of it raining down on the table and its inhabitants, some of it traveling all the way to the distant curtain. As if under fire, the men ran for cover in the garage. Vishniak spotted the cup of mud-colored liquid by his son. As Frank ran upstairs to get towels, Vishniak went closer. Those in the garage, including the owner of the navy jacket, now searched for a sink rumored to be in the back, where Stacia still did her washing. When they found it, the pipes made a loud squeaking sound as the slightly rusty water emerged from the spigot.
Robert knew that it was only a matter of minutes before his father figured out what Barry had been drinking and who’d given it to him. Across the room, Barry sat on the ground, clutching his stomach, too stunned to comment on what he’d wrought. Vishniak picked Barry up by the arm and, as he hung in the air, struck him several times on the behind.
“Shitfuckhellpiss!!” Barry screamed, over and over, so that Vishniak had no choice but to hit him again, across the mouth.
His father and brother occupied, Robert slipped a hand into the jacket, too scared to look around him or even to breathe. He felt for the lump, felt the momentary relief as he pulled out the smooth leather of a packed wallet and took half the contents, dropping a bill on the ground, then put the rest back. Quickly he retrieved the five from the floor and shoved the money down the front of his pants just as the men began to file back in from the garage, their faces, hair, and clothing all soaked with water. None of them looked pleased.
The pale eyes of his victim seemed to watch Robert closely as he rushed up the basement stairs and through the kitchen, then walked as calmly as he could through the living room where the women still sat. Avoiding his mother’s glance, he ran up the steps to the second floor. In his bedroom he fished the wilted bills out of his pants. They smelled of his skin, the newly pungent adolescent odor of damp yearning, of sweat socks and Ivory soap. He counted out three fives, a twenty, two tens, and four ones, and placed the bills on his desk to look at them. He was rich.
“You jerk!” Barry yelled, rushing up the steps. When Barry got to Robert’s bedroom, he climbed up on a chair and pounced on his brother. He smelled of vomit, and of cherry soda and whiskey, and it was all Robert could do not to gag as the two rolled around on the floor. “You set me up!” Barry said, crying as he punched and kicked his brother.
It took Robert some time to pin his furious brother down, holding his arms over his head. “Listen to me. I got us money. Lots of it.”
Barry struggled for a little longer, until he noticed the desk and the crumpled bills. “I want some,” he said. Robert released him, and he got up to touch the cash. “Half of that’s mine. I want what’s coming to me.”
“I have to think,” Robert said. “We need to be careful.”
In his short life, Barry had never been careful and did not intend to start now. He jumped onto the bed, yelping with delight. As miserable as he’d been a moment before was as triumphant as he was now. He used the mattress as a trampoline, falling to the floor with a loud thump and then jumping onto the bed again, then back to the floor. Suddenly they heard their mother’s fast and frantic footsteps on the stairs. Robert and Barry grabbed the money and shoved it into a drawer, but Barry held one bill back, slipping it into his pants pocket.
“What’s going on here?” Stacia asked, pulling at the door, which did not lock but rather stuck closed, the frame warped from dampness, so that it opened with a thwack.
The boys stood at attention next to the bed like soldiers during inspection. Vishniak’s anger was tame—a few slaps that barely stung—but their mother used a belt with a big, aggressive metal buckle. Even worse was the sound of her shrill voice, and her disappointment.
“We could hear you jumping downstairs. People thought the ceiling was gonna come down,” she said, moving toward the bed, her hands on her hips. “Barry, I told you to wash your face and change your shirt! Robert, comb your hair. You’ve been fighting, haven’t you? I can’t turn my back for five minutes—” She rushed at Robert but instead of hitting him, as he expected, she sat down abruptly on the bed and stared at the opposite wall. “Christ,” she added, putting her head in her hands, “what a disaster, from start to finish!”
The room was so silent that Robert could hear the ticking of the plastic alarm clock on the desk and then the click as the minute hand struck half after nine. His mother pulled briefly at her short black hair, and then she was still. Perhaps she didn’t want to go downstairs any more than they did. Robert walked over to the drawer, opened it, and took out two crumpled tens, then moved cautiously toward his mother. “Here,” he said, and put the bills in her lap.
“I’m not giving my half!” Barry said, but then Robert walked back to the drawer and took out the rest, dropped it into Stacia’s lap, and retreated to the opposite wall.
Stacia looked down at the money and began to straighten out the crumpled bills. “Where—?” she asked, but by then she must have thought of the commotion in the basement. There were few people in their family who carried so much money with them. Often these poker games ended in a flurry of IOUs that were paid, always, over time.
“Did you take everything?” she asked.
“I left half,” Robert said. “To make up for Pop. So you won’t be mad at him.”
“I didn’t bring you up to steal,” she said, but then she looked at Robert and something strange happened, something he rarely saw—she smiled. A half smile, really, because his mother had, years before, suffered an attack of Bell’s palsy, and her face never completely returned from the paralysis, so that her mouth sometimes went in two directions at once—just then, one side of her face was entertained, but the other turned downward, a mix of shame and mortification that would stay with her all night, so that from the time she served the food, to the moment the last guest took his coat and left, Stacia would not make eye contact with a single person.
But that was later. Right now, the boys stood by the bed, wondering what would happen to them. Robert elbowed his brother to tell him to give back that last bill, but Barry would have none of it. At age eight, Barry was already his own man, his behavior hard to predict. Like their mother, he always wanted what was coming to him—but then, like their father, he could turn around one day and hand you everything he had for no reason at all.
Stacia’s hands shook slightly as she gathered the bills into a pile, then folded the pile in half and put it into an apron pocket.
“You gonna give the money back?” Barry asked.
“Don’t see how I can,” she said, “without having the two of you admit what you did. And you’re not apologizing to the likes of them. A bunch of thieves with their government contracts.”
“I don’t wanna,” said Barry. “Apologize.”
“Well then,” she said, “the men are coming upstairs to eat with us now, so go wash your hands. And don’t forget to use soap.”
Continues...
Excerpted from Rich Boy by Pomerantz, Sharon Copyright © 2010 by Pomerantz, Sharon. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.