“She’s not hurt is she?” Marshall said. He had reached out to brace himself by putting his hand on Freer’s shoulder.
“Sonja’s okay,” Freer said. “McCallum’s wife went off the deep end this morning and went over to your house and attempted to stab him to death.”
The blond cop’s nod corroborated this.
“This is a terrible thing to find out,” Freer said to the cops, nodding in Marshall’s direction as if he couldn’t hear. He could hear, but the sound was wavery; trying to hear distinctly was like what could happen visually when you were driving on a hot day, seeing a mirage in front of your car, knowing it was only heat rising from asphalt. Freer had turned his back and was walking away. Freer was walking away: he’d been a mirage.
“He isn’t dead, is he?” Marshall said.
“If it was known, we’d know.”
What was this, some Zen riddle?
The other cop saw his confusion; he said, “He’s in surgery. Got knifed pretty bad.”
“He got knifed in my house?” Marshall said. It was beginning to register. McCallum had had a fight with his wife. She must have found out where they lived and gone there. What was he expected to do, try to remember the story about the bag lady near Boston Common? This was like one of those nightmares, one of those anxiety dreams in which he wasn’t prepared for class, all he could do was fill time, stand there making a fool of himself and suffering intensely as the students realized he didn’t know what he was talking about. A bag lady? What was that about? The class was to be on Derek Walcott’s “The Gulf.” Every thought he had ever had about Derek Walcott rushed out of his brain. Thank God he was not in the classroom.
“We’d like to take you down to headquarters and have you describe the previous twenty-four hours,” Green Eyes said.
“Twenty-four hours,” Marshall echoed. How could he begin to remember it all? And what was he to do if only irrelevant, inappropriate things continued to subsume his thoughts, such as the slightly minty smell of Cheryl Lanier’s shampoo, the now-vivid image of the pizza delivery boy, every detail of his face suddenly clear, the bruise-like bags under his eyes, the lock of hair curving over his forehead. He could hear the boy’s footsteps on the stairs, see the square silver pad from which the pizza was slipped — that familiar magic prop of our time, the sort of top hat from which a rabbit would be pulled — smell marijuana seeping from the apartment, from which Livan Baker and her boyfriend had suddenly materialized.
Both cops were looking at him, frowning, neither one speaking.
“How ya doin’? This comes as a shock, I know,” the green-eyed cop said. “You left for school this morning, next thing you know you’re walking down the hall with two cops, hearing about an attempted murder in your house.”
“Do you think he’s going to die?” Marshall said.
“Those surgeons try very hard. If he dies, it’s not because they didn’t try,” the narrow-eyed cop said. “I personally have a lot of respect for surgeons.”
“It’s not the greatest sign if we get beeped here,” the other cop said. “Though to tell you the truth, they’ve beeped us for nothing. You stop thinking it’s necessarily going to be something crucial after the first hundred or so stupid beeps.”
All right, then: McCallum’s wife had stabbed him, but he would be fine. McCallum was not by any stretch of the imagination a friend of his, except that when you didn’t really have any friends, it was difficult to disallow acquaintances. He had been thinking that, something like that, not too long ago, on a day when Cheryl Lanier came to his office to borrow a poetry anthology, and when she had left, he had looked out the window and seen her, seen a dog, as well, and he had reflected that there was every possibility he didn’t love anyone, although that was absurd. Absurd, but a thought he had had two or three times before, remembering that he’d thought it before only when the idea hit again. Now he concentrated on thinking otherwise. He loved his wife. He loved Evie. He loved his brother, Gordon.
“Freer wanted to tell me himself?” Marshall said.
“Yeah, but it was our obligation to proceed directly. We told him that and gave him five minutes,” the blond cop said. “I don’t know what this stuff was about his bringing you to the station. Delusions of grandeur, or something.”
“People don’t know how the law works,” the other cop said.
“Rest assured, there are no charges against you,” the blond cop said. “Nobody thinks you stabbed your friend, Professor.” Was this happening? “Mrs. McCallum walked into the post office and told the clerk she’d done it, blood all over her,” the blond cop said. “You know, gas station attendants are getting confessions all the time. People pull in and roll down their window and it’s like a drive-through confessional. Or they buy a candy bar inside and spill the beans, they just blurt it out while the guy’s giving them change. Go figure.”
At the station house, Marshall drank a cup of lukewarm coffee. He was simultaneously videotaped and tape-recorded, while the blond cop took notes in shorthand and his partner asked every third question. Marshall was tormented about how much to say, how much to tell them about Livan Baker and whatever McCallum’s involvement had been with her. He was surprised to see how withholding he could become; he volunteered nothing, half out of sympathy with McCallum, who might be dying as he sat in the station house talking to the cops, half because he felt sure the cops would do nothing to clarify matters for him, and he thought now, deep down, that McCallum had been telling the truth, that Livan Baker’s involvement with McCallum had been far less than she claimed.
The questions they asked him were easy to answer, though they zigzagged backward and forward in time so that eventually he began to assume there must be some underlying logic to the way they pitched the questions that he didn’t understand — or were they trying to get him to reveal something besides his own genuine confusion?
McCallum appeared at the house while he was out on an errand?
Out getting milk.
What year had he met McCallum?
Whatever year he was hired.…
How would he characterize his personal relationship with McCallum?
Oh, as a colleague. You know: bantering. He had trouble with his wife, trouble at home.
Trouble at home.
The wife was pregnant and McCallum didn’t seem pleased by that.
How well did he know McCallum’s wife?
Oh, not at all. Not … perhaps he’d seen her across a room.
What time did he leave the house that morning?
Nine-thirty.
And he had gone out on an errand the night before to get—
To get milk. Sonja was showing some prospective clients a house; I realized we were low on milk, Marshall filled in, surprised that he felt slightly giddy, an odd mixture of pleasure at pleasing, filling in the spaces, saying something informative: the good student still. Yet he also feared that his nervousness was apparent. He felt himself shifting in the chair, shifting more than someone ordinarily would, when informing people he’d gone out for milk. Welclass="underline" they didn’t need to know anything about Cheryl Lanier. He could forget Cheryl Lanier. Whom he had dropped off at that house, glowing in the darkness, after she had said that she wanted to spend the night with friends, after he had pulled her close to him in the car. I’m sorry?
The question was repeated: his wife had been home, she said, for a couple of hours with McCallum.
Yes, Sonja got stuck with consoling him for quite a while.… He saw the trap: he could not have been getting milk for two hours. Maybe it seemed to her that she talked to him for two hours; probably she didn’t talk to him for two hours.