flattery, or the pooch -puh poom -puh poom -puh poom-poom-poom of a protracted point.
In that Willy's calculation of a tennis score was automatic, neglecting to keep track of who won what took a concentration of its own. (Gentlemen did not announce the score.) She'd have expected Max to dispatch the parvenu in thirty-five minutes, though once Willy had realigned her racket strings and bounced a ball off the face five hundred times without missing, the half hour was long past and those two were still batting away. Max was moist. Eric was playing plenty of trash, but it sometimes worked. At last, after another point during which she had found a rally two courts away more compelling, she turned to find them shaking over the net, stiffly.
Willy picked herself up, dusting off her shorts, and the two gladiators ambled to their bags.
"You're a pro," said Max.
"Yes," said Eric.
"Ranked?"
"972."
Max cocked his mouth. "Ways to go."
"I'd never picked up a racket with any seriousness until I was eighteen. My first year at Princeton I was on the basketball team."
"Eighteen. Late."
"As in better than never."
They were both ignoring Willy, who was looking daggers at her new friend, the pro . She should have sensed it. At her stoop, his right palm had scratched her neck with lumpy calluses. He had not arrived at Sweetspot toting one racket but three, and as he zipped the Prince into its expensively padded case, she recognized the classic asymmetry of his arms: the right so comparatively overdeveloped that it suggested a skewed proportion of mind, as if a tennis player placed too much weight, literally, on one side of his life.
"I'll show you the showers," she offered. Eric didn't respond. His motions were jagged, his manner curt. The last time he was hammered he'd been jubilant; perhaps she was to infer from this truculence that he'd won the match.
As she traipsed with her guest toward the locker rooms, Max motioned her back. "I know his strokes are rough," he warned her quietly. "Sleazy. But underneath the junk, that kid can play."
Trudging across the field, Eric walked ahead, indulging the naturally extreme stride of a man at least six-two. They were trapped in the estranged silence of two people who had played tennis, but not with each other. And Willy could hardly make conversation about a match she had declined to follow so belligerently that she didn't know who had won.
"So what, we're supposed to shovel institutional slop with a bunch of pampered, brain-dead sportsmen of tomorrow?"
"There's an Italian place in town. Max would lend us a car."
"Upchurch would lend you a car." Eric kicked the ragweed.
"For a sport in which you apparently have aspirations yourself, you don't seem to have much respect for the folks who play it."
"You respect these people? " he asked incredulously.
" Respect may be the wrong word. But the game itself—"
"Is a pretty doable business. Sometimes you beat people at their own game not because you think it's so all-fired marvelous but because you don't."
Scurrying to keep up, Willy was mesmerized by the long, loose legs eating the ground with such blithe assurance. Surely it behooved her to defend the crowd in which she ran, but for a moment Eric's contempt was liberating. He was right, in a way. The lofty regard in which most pro players held their calling was insupportably pompous. The majority of her "colleagues" were narrow, fatuous, and catty. All they wished for Willy was defeat, and in truth she owed them nothing. Though she'd always tried to keep the sport and its practitioners separate in her head, Eric lured her with the giddy freedom of seeing even tennis itself as "a pretty doable business," a skill she had mastered but did not master her. For Willy's reverence for tennis was a tyranny—the more gravity she gave it, the more it crushed her when she fell short of the sport's uncompromising