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" We ended up at the bar of a little steak house I had never noticed before. It was one of those places that seemed to have slipped through time unscathed and walking into it was like walking into a different decade. Dark walls, leather booths, thick slabs of beef, ashtrays on every table. The man behind the bar in a red plaid vest had the open, sad face of an old-time baseball player.

“Mrs. S.,” he said in a thick nasally voice when we sat on the red-leather stools. “Terrific as always to see you.”

“Rocco, this is Victor,” she said. “Victor and I are in desperate need of a drink. I’ll have the usual. What will it be for you, Victor?”

“Do you make a sea breeze?” I said.

Rocco looked at me like I had spit on the bar.

I got the message. This was a serious place for serious drinking, a leftover from an era when the cocktail hour was a sacred thing, when a man was defined by his drink and no man wanted to be defined by something as sweet and inconsequential as a sea breeze. Kids in short pants with ball gloves sticking out of their pockets drank soda pop, men drank like men.

“What’s she having?” I said, nodding at my companion.

“A manhattan.”

“What’s that?”

“Whiskey, bitters, sweet vermouth.”

“And a cherry,” said Alura Straczynski. “Mustn’t forget the cherry.”

“No, Mrs. S.,” said Rocco. “I wouldn’t forget your cherry. "

William Lashner , Past Due (Victor Carl, #4)


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William Lashner quote : We ended up at the bar of a little steak house I had never noticed before. It was one of those places that seemed to have slipped through time unscathed and walking into it was like walking into a different decade. Dark walls, leather booths, thick slabs of beef, ashtrays on every table. The man behind the bar in a red plaid vest had the open, sad face of an old-time baseball player.<br /><br />“Mrs. S.,” he said in a thick nasally voice when we sat on the red-leather stools. “Terrific as always to see you.”<br /><br />“Rocco, this is Victor,” she said. “Victor and I are in desperate need of a drink. I’ll have the usual. What will it be for you, Victor?”<br /><br />“Do you make a sea breeze?” I said.<br /><br />Rocco looked at me like I had spit on the bar.<br /><br />I got the message. This was a serious place for serious drinking, a leftover from an era when the cocktail hour was a sacred thing, when a man was defined by his drink and no man wanted to be defined by something as sweet and inconsequential as a sea breeze. Kids in short pants with ball gloves sticking out of their pockets drank soda pop, men drank like men.<br /><br />“What’s she having?” I said, nodding at my companion.<br /><br />“A manhattan.”<br /><br />“What’s that?”<br /><br />“Whiskey, bitters, sweet vermouth.”<br /><br />“And a cherry,” said Alura Straczynski. “Mustn’t forget the cherry.”<br /><br />“No, Mrs. S.,” said Rocco. “I wouldn’t forget your cherry.