A woman answered.
"Hello," she said. "Who's there?"
"A friend of a friend," William said.
"Uh huh," she said in a tone completely devoid of surprise. "A friend of what friend?"
"Jean. Jean Goldblum."
"Oh." Pause. So maybe she knew, had already scanned the obits and knew. "You'd like to see me I guess?"
Well yes, he would.
"Sure. Why not. I'd love to see you."
"Sure. Let me see… wait a minute… how about, oh, nine o clock? Is that okay with you?"
More than okay. Terrific actually. Couldn't be better.
"Tonight? Nine o'clock tonight?"
"Yes. Would you like to come another night?"
He'd have to consult his schedule on that one. Nope. Sorry, all booked up tomorrow night, it'd have to be tonight.
"Tonight's fine."
"Okay. Why don't you write down my address."
"Sure. Go ahead."
"Thirteen-eighty-one Yellowstone Boulevard. Apartment 9D. That's Yellowstone. A friend of Jean's, huh?"
"That's right. A friend."
"Yes. Well, we're all friends now, aren't we."
Absolutely. All of us, friends.
"I'll see you at nine," William said, then he put the phone back in its cradle, smacked it down hard, and wondered exactly what it is that he'd done.
SEVEN
He told himself on the way to see Jean's friend that he was just being friendly, that he was on a mission of mercy, a comforting angel here. After all, wasn't it right for the bereaved to seek out the bereaved? And if he wasn't all that broken up himself, perhaps she was, and if she wasn't, then perhaps he was merely tying up loose ends, paying his respects to Jean's memory. And then there were other reasons: that he was maybe just a smidgen lonely tonight, that is, lonelier even than he was on any other night, which was, when he allowed himself to think about it, considerably lonely. And then too she'd sounded sort of sweet on the phone, maybe even grateful for his call. Perhaps she did want to cry on his shoulder; perhaps he wanted to cry on hers. We're all friends now, aren't we. Well, sure.
But after he'd made his way to Forest Hills, a neighborhood of tall dark towers and rounded driveways, of metal jockeys and endless hedge, after he'd gotten past a rather rumpled doorman who sat stolidly behind a small bright monitor and waved him through, after he'd rung her button and she'd slowly opened her door and asked him in, after that, he'd immediately realized that, of course, they weren't all friends, that she really wasn't a friend of Jean's at all, and even if she was a friend of Jean's, she was unaware of something vital, of the very reason for his visit. She didn't, William was positive of this, know that Jean was dead.
For one thing, she was smiling, something that bereaved people aren't generally known to do-crying, sobbing, frowning, screaming, sure, but not smiling. Well maybe to acquaintances, but then, he wasn't. For another thing, she was dressed as if she was about to go out on the town, but, of course, she wasn't about to go out on the town. A silky black dress that plunged in front and plunged in back and was slit up the sides as high as an elephant's eye, all the way to a tattoo which said Eat Your Heart Out. That's what she wore. And then William remembered the way the doorman had waved him through without first calling up, kind of like a ticket-taker. She was smiling for him, sure, but like this professionally decorated apartment, it was a professionally decorative smile. And she, of course, was a professional.
"Sit down," she said, very professionally too. "How about a drink?"
Drinks, of course, were the problem here. Five drinks had made him a little slow on the uptake, had made William a very dull boy.
"Sorry," William said.
"Sorry?" She twisted her eyebrows quizzically, perfect eyebrows too, eyebrows she'd spent some time on. "What for?"
"I'm not here for what you think I am."
"Okay," she said, still holding that smile, William thinking it must be hard holding a smile like that. "What are you here for?"
"Well…" Not exactly sure how to answer that, but willing to give it a shot. "Well…"
"Why don't you just relax and tell me."
He was already relaxed, his brain at least, which was off somewhere sitting on a BarcaLounger.
"Sometimes it's hard to tell these things," she said, "but you don't have to be embarrassed here."
Well that was a matter of opinion, wasn't it? Her tone very soothing now, like Muzak, William thought, amazing how she could switch it just like that, from genial hostess to dental hygienist. We'll just start the gas now and then you'll feel a little prick…
"You'd like me to guess, is that it? You don't like to talk about it, that's okay. Have you been a bad boy? Have you been a very bad boy? Would you like Mommy to take you over her knee and spank you maybe, spank you till you say you're sorry."
Actually, he felt like spanking himself. Yes he did.
"I think," William said, "I'm going to be sick." The drinks had turned on him, just like that, they'd said enough fun for you, old sod and turned on him. "Forgive me… where's your bathroom?" But it was too late; everything he'd poured into him suddenly began to pour out of him.
"Shit!" she said, finally and indisputably losing that smile. "Get over there… over there"-pointing to the hallway on the left-"shit… get to the bathroom… you're getting it all over the rug!"
So William ran, clutching his stomach, ran into the dark hallway, which ran into a dark bathroom, vomit dripping from him like sweat, got to the bathroom, then stood, hunched over the toilet, heaving.
In two dreadful minutes it was all over. White, trembling, he slowly straightened up, then flushed the toilet. She was somewhere behind him now, frantically laying towels over the carpet, trying to soak up his trail of vomit.
Wonderful, he thought. Wonderful. A perfect end to a perfect day.
He walked out of the bathroom.
"Please," he said, "forgive me. Drinks… five drinks… I couldn't handle… the funeral…"
"What funeral?" She was still down on her knees pressing the last towel against the carpet.
"Jean's. Jean's funeral. Your number was in his phone book. I didn't know…"
Okay. She didn't go teary-eyed on him, or gasp out loud, or even shake her head, but she did finally stop trying to soak up his vomit and look up at him with an expression that registered, well… loss. There was no other way to put it. Okay, William thought, maybe she'd been a friend after all.
"What did he die from?" she asked.
"Heart attack."
"Oh." She nodded, as if she'd expected as much. Perhaps she'd known a lot about Jean's heart; perhaps she'd been, in a way, an expert on it.
"Look," she said, finally getting up, "I made a mistake. You made a mistake. Mistakes happen." She motioned toward the door, as in the door's that way, as in nice seeing you, bye, as in leave.
But he was staring at the carpet now, a deep shag, like something that had just been killed, or certainly, violated.
"What about the…?" nodding at the tapestry of towels that had begun to take on the unmistakable color of Jack Daniel's.
"Forget it," she said. "I'll get it cleaned."
"Here." William reached for his wallet, only in reaching for it, lost his balance and nearly tipped over.
"You don't look so hot," she said. "Sit down."
He was going to say no, honest he was, but he was dizzy and disoriented and ashamed-not necessarily in that order. And just like with Rodriguez earlier today, he'd been asked.