“Well, it wasn’t Damian, if that’s what you’re thinking.”
“Damian?”
He regretted bringing the name to her attention. He said, “It wasn’t the guys who moved me in.”
“No. Those were friends, as I understand.”
“Right.”
“How about the man’s voice? Did you hear him speak?”
He felt a sudden sense of despair. He said, “Didn’t they tell you I don’t remember? I don’t remember a thing!”
“Just checking.”
“What: do you imagine you’ll trip me up?”
“No need to get excited, sir.”
He forced himself to take a deep breath. No need at all; she was right, but somehow he felt accused. To this woman he looked inattentive, sloppy, lax. He decided to go on the offensive. “So what will you do next?” he asked her.
“Well, we have the case in our records now.”
“Is that it?”
She stared him down.
“How about fingerprints? Did they find any fingerprints?” he asked.
“Oh, well, fingerprints. Fingerprints are overrated,” she said.
Then she told him to take care (an expression he hated; take care of what?), and she and her partner walked out.
Back during Liam’s first marriage, when all their friends were having babies, he and Millie knew a woman who experienced some terrible complication during labor and lay in a coma for several weeks afterward. Gradually she returned to consciousness, but for a long time she had no recollection of the whole preceding year. She didn’t even remember being pregnant. Here was this infant boy, very sweet and all that but what did he have to do with her? Then one day, a neighbor climbed her porch steps and trilled out, “Yoo-hoo!” Evidently that was the neighbor’s trademark greeting, uttered in a high fluty voice with a Southern roundness to the vowels. The woman rose slowly from her chair. Her eyes widened; her lips parted. As she described it later, it was as if the neighbor’s “Yoo-hoo” had provided a string for her to grab hold of, and when she tugged it, other memories came trailing in besides-not just the previous “Yoo-hoos,” but how this neighbor brought homemade pies to people at the drop of a hat, and how she always labeled her pie tins with her name on a strip of masking tape, and how in fact she’d contributed a pie to the final, celebratory meeting of the childbirth class that they had both attended. Childbirth! And bit by bit, over the course of the next few days, more and more came back, until the woman remembered everything.
Wouldn’t it be wonderful if Liam could find such a string?
“Good afternoon, Dr. Morrow’s office,” the voice on the telephone said.
Liam said, “Ah, hello. Verity? I’m calling on behalf of Ishmael Cope. Mr. Cope has mislaid his appointment card, and he asked me to find out when he’s due in next.”
“Cope,” the receptionist said. There was a series of clicking sounds. “Cope. Cope. Ishmael Cope. He’s not due in.”
“He’s not?”
“Did he say he was?”
“Well, ah… yes, he seemed to believe so.”
“But he was just here,” the receptionist said.
“Was he? Oh, his mistake, then. Never mind.”
“Ordinarily he waits till closer to the actual time to make the next appointment, since we see him just every three months is all, but if you’d prefer to set something up for him-”
“I’ll find out and call you back. Thanks.”
Liam replaced the receiver.
That evening his sister arrived bearing a cast-iron pot. “Stew,” she announced, and she swept past him into the apartment and stopped short and looked around. “Goodness,” she said. Liam didn’t know why. All his boxes were unpacked now and he thought the place was looking fairly decent. But: “You know,” she said, “just because you live alone doesn’t mean you have to live miserably.”
“I’m not living miserably!”
She turned and skinned him with a glance. “And don’t think I can’t see what you’re up to,” she said. “You’re trying to come out even with your clothes.”
“Come out…?”
“You suppose if you play your cards right, you won’t have to buy more clothes before you die.”
“I don’t suppose any such thing,” Liam said. Although it was true that the idea had crossed his mind once or twice, just as a theoretical possibility. “What’s wrong with what I’m wearing?” he asked her.
“Your pants are losing a belt loop and that shirt is so old it’s transparent.”
He had hoped nobody would notice.
Julia herself was, as always, impeccably put together. She wore what she must have worn to work that day: a tailored navy suit and matching pumps. It was obvious she and Liam were related-she had Liam’s stick-straight gray hair and brown eyes, and she was short like him although, of course, smaller boned-but she’d never allowed herself to put on so much as an extra ounce, and her face was still crisply defined while Liam’s had grown a bit pudgy. Also, she had a much more definite way of speaking. (This may have been due to her profession. She was a lawyer.) She said, for instance, “I’m going to stay and eat with you. I trust you have no plans,” and something in her tone suggested that if he did have plans, he would naturally be canceling them.
She marched on into the kitchen, where she set the pot on the stove and slid a canvas grocery bag from her shoulder. “Where do you keep your silverware?” she asked.
“Oh, um…”
Just then Kitty sauntered down the hallway from the bedroom, clearly summoned by the sound of their voices. “Aunt Julia!” she said.
“Hello, there, Kitty. I’ve brought your dad some beef stew.”
“But he doesn’t eat red meat.”
“He can just pluck the meat out, then,” Julia said briskly. She was pulling drawers open; in the third, she found the silverware. “Will you be joining us?”
“Well, sure, I guess so,” Kitty said, although earlier she’d told Liam not to count on her for supper. (All three of his daughters seemed drawn to Julia’s company, perhaps because she made herself so scarce.)
Kitty was wearing one of those outfits that showed her abdomen, and in her navel she had somehow affixed a little round mirror the size of a dime. From where Liam stood, it looked as if she had a hole in her stomach. It was the oddest effect. He kept glancing at it and blinking, but Julia seemed impervious. “Here,” she said, handing Kitty a fistful of silver. “Set the table, will you.” No doubt she saw all sorts of get-ups in family court. She slapped a baguette on a cutting board and went back to searching through drawers, presumably hunting a bread knife, although Liam could have told her she wouldn’t find one. She settled on a serrated fruit knife. “Now, I trust you’re researching burglar alarms,” she told Liam.
“No, not really,” he said.
“This is important, Liam. If you insist on living in unsafe surroundings, you should at least take steps to protect yourself.”
“The thing of it is, I don’t think this place is unsafe,” Liam told her. “I think what happened was just a fluke. If I hadn’t left the patio door unlocked, and if some drugged-up guy hadn’t come fumbling around on the off chance he could get in somewhere… But at least I seem to have neighbors who will call the police, you notice.”
He had met the neighbors that morning-a portly, middle-aged couple heading out to their car just as he was dropping a bag of garbage into the bin. “How’s your head?” the husband had asked him. “We’re the Hunstlers. The folks who phoned 911.”
Liam said, “Oh. Glad to meet you.” He had to force himself to proceed through the proper steps-thank them for their help, give a report on his injuries-before he could ask, “Why did you phone, exactly? I mean, what was it that you heard? Did you hear me say any words?”