“Very nice.” He paused and then commented, “You know, these aren’t cheap, Adelphia.”
“It is not like I drink the café a hundred times all of the days.”
“But you have money?”
Adelphia eyed his new clothes. “So? And you, you have the money.”
“I have a job. And my friends, they help me.”
“It is no one that helps me. I work for money, all of it.”
Stone was surprised that he’d never asked her this before. “What do you do?”
“I am seamstress for laundry place. I work when I want. They pay me good. And they give me good deal on room,” she said. “And then I can buy the café when I want.”
“It must be very rewarding to have such a skill,” Stone said absently.
They stopped talking, and their gazes idly took in other people in the small park.
Adelphia finally broke the silence. “So your match of chess, you were victor?”
“No. My defeat was based on equal parts lack of concentration and my opponent’s considerable skill.”
“My father, he was very excellent at the chess. He was a, how you say . . .” She hesitated, obviously searching for the right words in English. “My father, he was a, how you say, Wielki Mistrz.”
“A grand champion? No, you mean a grand master. That’s very impressive.”
She glanced at him sharply. “You speak Polish?”
“Just a little.”
“You have been to Poland?”
“A very long time ago,” he said, sipping his coffee and watching the breeze gently move the leaves on the trees overhead. “I take it that’s where you’re from?” he asked curiously. Adelphia had never spoken about her origins before.
“It was in Krakow that I was born, but then my family, they move to Bialystok. I was just a child, so I go too.”
Stone had been to both those cities but had no intention of telling her that. “I really only know Warsaw, and, as I said, that was a long time ago. Probably before you were born.”
“Ha, that is nice thing you say that. Even if it is a lie!” She put her coffee down on the bench and gazed at him. “It is very much younger you look, Oliver.”
“Thanks to you and your wizardry with scissors and a razor.”
“And your friends, do they not think so too?”
“My friends?” he said, glancing at her.
“I have seen them.”
He looked at her again. “Well, they’ve all come to visit me at Lafayette Park.”
“No, I mean at your meetings I have seen them.”
He tried not to look concerned at her stunning words. “So you followed me to my meetings? I hope they weren’t too boring.” What has she seen or heard?
She looked coy and, as though she’d read his thoughts, said, “It might have been things I hear, or it might not.”
“When was that?” he asked.
“So finally it is I have your attention.” She edged closer to him and actually patted his hand. “Do not worry, Oliver, I am not spy. I see things but I do not hear. And the things I see, well, they stay with me always. Always they do.”
“It’s not like we have anything worth overhearing or seeing.”
“It is truth you seek, Oliver?” she said, smiling. “Like your sign say, it is truth you want. I can tell. You are such a man who seeks this.”
“I’m afraid as the years go by, my chances of actually finding it are fewer and fewer.”
Adelphia suddenly glanced over at a person who was staggering through the park. Anyone who had been on the streets of Washington over the last ten years had probably seen this pitiable sight. He had short stubs of bone and skin where his arms should have been. His legs were so horribly twisted that it was a miracle he could even remain upright. He was usually half-naked, even in winter. He had no shoes on. His feet were scarred and covered with sores, the toes oddly bent. His eyes were largely vacant, and a steady current of spittle slipped down his face and onto his chest. As far as anyone knew, he could not even speak. A small pouch hung from a string around his neck. Written across his tattered shirt in childlike scrawl was one word: “Help.”
Stone had given money to the man on numerous occasions and knew that he lived over a steam grate by the Treasury Department. He’d tried to help the man over the years, but his mind was simply too far gone. If any government agency had stepped in to help, Stone was unaware of it.
“My God, that man, that poor man. My heart, it bursts for his suffering,” Adelphia said. She raced over to him, pulled out some dollars from her pocket and placed them in his pouch. He babbled something at her and then staggered off to another group nearby, who also immediately opened their pocketbooks and wallets to him.
As Adelphia was returning to her spot next to Stone, a large man stepped in front of her, blocking the way.
He said gruffly, “I don’t look as shitty as that guy, but I’m hungry and I need a drink bad.” His hair was ratty and in his face, but he wasn’t dressed that shabbily. However, the stench coming off his body in waves was overpowering.
“It is no more I have,” Adelphia answered in a frightened tone.
“You’re lying!” He grabbed her arm and yanked Adelphia toward him. “Give me some damn money!”
Before Adelphia could even cry out, Stone was beside her.
“Let her go now!” Stone demanded.
The man was a good twenty-five years younger than Stone and far bigger. “Get out of here, old man. This doesn’t concern you.”
“This woman is my friend.”
“I said get out of here!” He followed this with a vicious swing that caught Stone flush on the chin. He dropped to the ground, clutching his face.
“Oliver!” Adelphia screamed.
Other people in the park were yelling at the man now, and someone was running off, calling out for a policeman.
As Stone struggled to get to his feet, the man pulled a switchblade out of his pocket and pointed it at Adelphia. “Give me the money or I’ll cut you bad, bitch.”
Stone made a sudden lunge. The man let go of Adelphia and staggered back, dropping his knife. He fell to his knees, every muscle in his body trembling, and then he collapsed onto his back on the grass, writhing in agony.
Stone picked up the switchblade and then palmed the weapon in a very unusual way. He reached over and ripped open his assailant’s collar, exposing the man’s thick neck and throbbing arteries. For an instant it seemed that Stone was going to slice that neck open from ear to ear as the knifepoint edged very near a pulsing vein. There was a look in Oliver Stone’s eyes that virtually no one who had known him over the last thirty-odd years had ever seen. Yet Stone abruptly stopped and gazed up at Adelphia, who stood there staring at him, her chest heaving. At that moment it was not clear which man she feared more.
“Oliver?” she said quietly. “Oliver?”
Stone dropped the knife on the ground, rose and wiped off his pants.
“My God, you are bleeding,” Adelphia cried out. “Bleeding!”
“I’m fine,” he said shakily as he dabbed at his bloody mouth with his sleeve. That was a lie. The blow had hurt him very much. His head was bursting, and he felt sick to his stomach. He picked at something in his mouth and yanked out a tooth the man’s punch had loosened.