"I'll take a small one," Mazzard said, looking at her, pecking.
"Bathroom down that way?" Herb asked, getting up.
The talking went on, more relaxed and casual now.
New projects.
Old projects.
Mazzard tucked his pen into his jacket, smiling.
She said "Whew!" and fanned herself.
Coba raised his head, keeping his hands behind it, and chin-against-chest, looked at the notebook on Mazzard's knee. Mazzard turned pages, looking at Coba, and Coba nodded and said, "You never cease to amaze me."
"Do I get to see?" she asked.
"Of course!" Mazzard said, and half rose, smiling, holding out the open notebook to her.
Walter looked too, and Frank leaned in to see.
Portraits of her; there were page after page of them, small and precise-and flattering, as Ike Mazzard's work had always been. Full faces, three-quarter views, profiles; smiling, not smiling, talking, frowning.
"These are beautiful," Walter said, and Frank said, "Great, Ike!" Claude and Herb came around behind the sofa.
She leafed back through the pages. "They're-wonderful," she said. "I wish I could say they were absolutely accurate-"
"But they are!" Mazzard said.
"God bless you." She gave the notebook to him, and he put it on his knee and turned its pages, getting out his pen. He wrote on a page, and tore it out and offered it to her.
It was one of the three-quarter views, a non-smiling one, with the familiar no-capitals ike mazzard signature. She showed it to Walter; he said, "Thanks, Ike."
"My pleasure."
She smiled at Mazzard. "Thank you," she said. "I forgive you for blighting my adolescence." She smiled at all of them. "Does anyone want coffee?"
They all did, except Claude, who wanted tea.
She went into the kitchen and put the drawing on the place mats on top of the refrigerator. An Ike Mazzard drawing of her! Who'da thunk it, back home when she was eleven or twelve, reading Mom's Journals and Companions? It was foolish of her to have gotten so uptight about it. Mazzard had been nice to do it.
Smiling, she ran water into the coffee-maker, plugged it in, and put in the basket and spooned in coffee. She put the top on, pressed the plastic lid down onto the coffee can, and turned around. Coba leaned in the doorway watching her, his arms folded, his shoulder to the jamb.
Very cool in his jade turtleneck (matching his eyes, of course) and slate-gray corduroy suit.
He smiled at her and said, "I like to watch women doing little domestic chores."
"You came to the right town," she said. She tossed the spoon into the sink and took the coffee can to the refrigerator and put it in.
Coba stayed there, watching her.
She wished Walter would come. "You don't seem particularly dizzy," she said, getting out a saucepan for Claude's tea. "Why do they call you Diz?"
"I used to work at Disneyland," he said.
She laughed, going to the sink. "No, really," she said.
"That's really."
She turned around and looked at him.
"Don't you believe me?" he asked.
"No," she said.
"Why not?"
She thought, and knew.
"Why not?" he said. "Tell me."
To hell with him; she would. "You don't look like someone who enjoys making people happy."
Torpedoing forever, no doubt, the admission of women to the hallowed and sacrosanct Men's Association.
Coba looked at her-disparagingly. "How little you know," he said.
And smiled and got off the jamb, and turned and walked away.
"I'M NOT SO KEEN ON El Presidente," she said, undressing, and Walter said, "Neither am 1. He's cold as ice. But he won't be in office forever."
"He'd better not be," she said, "or women'll never get in. When are elections?"
"Right after the first of the year."
"What does he do?"
"He's with Burnham-Massey, on Route Nine. So is Claude."
"Oh listen, what's his last name?"
"Claude's? Axhehn."
Kim began crying, and was burning hot; and they were up till after three, taking her temperature (a hundred and three at first), reading Dr. Spock, calling Dr. Verry, and giving her cool baths and alcohol rubs.
BOBBIE FOUND A LIVE ONE. "At least she is compared to the rest of these clunks," her voice rasped from the phone. "Her name is Charmaine Wimperis, and if you squint a little she turns into Raquel Welch. They're up on Burgess Ridge in a two-hundredthousand-dollar contemporary, and she's got a maid and a gardener and-now hear this-a tennis court."
"Really?"
"I thought that would get you out of the cellar. You're invited to play, and for lunch too. I'll pick you up around eleven-thirty."
"Today? I can't! Kim is still home."
"Still?"
"Could we make it Wednesday? Or Thursday, just to be safe."
"Wednesday," Bobbie said. "I'll check with her and call you back."
WHAM! POW! SLAM! Charmaine was good, too goddamn good; the ball came zinging straight and hard, first to one side of the court and then to the other; it kept her racing from side to side and then drove her all the way back-a just-inside-the-liner that she barely caught. She ran in after it, but Charmaine smashed it down into the left net corner-ungettable-and took the game and the set, six-three. After taking the first set six-two. "Oh God, I've had it!" Joanna said. "What a fiasco! Oh boy!"
"One more!" Charmaine called, backing to the serve line. "Come on, one more!"
"I can't! I'm not going to be able to walk tomorrow as it is!" She picked up the ball. "Come on, Bobbie, you play!"
Bobbie, sitting cross-legged on the grass outside the mesh fence, her face trayed on a sun reflector, said, "I haven't played since camp, for Chrisake."
"Just a game then!" Charmaine called. "One more game, Joanna!"
"All right, one more game!"
Charinaine won it.
"You killed me but it was great!" Joanna said as they walked off the court together. "Thank you!"
Charmaine, patting her high-boned cheeks carefully with an end of her towel, said, "You just have to get back in practice, that's all. You have a first-rate serve."
"Fat lot of good it did me."
"Will you play often? All I've got now are a couple of teen-age boys, both with permanent erections."
Bobbie said, "Send them to my place"-getting up from the ground.
They walked up the flagstone path toward the house.
"It's a terrific court," Joanna said, toweling her arm.
"Then use it," Charmaine said. "I used to play every day with Ginnie Fisher-do you know her?-but she flaked out on me. Don't you, will you?
How about tomorrow?"
"Oh I couldn't!"
They sat on a terrace under a Cinzano umbrella, and the maid, a slight gray-haired woman named Nettie, brought them a pitcher of Bloody Mary's and a bowl of cucumber dip and crackers. "She's marvelous," Charmaine said. "A German Virgo; if I told her to lick my shoes she'd do it. What are you, Joanna?"
"An American Taurus."
"If you tell her to lick your shoes she spits in your eye," Bobbie said.
"You don't really believe that stuff, do you?"
"I certainly do," Charmaine said, pouring Bloody Mary's. "You would too if you came to it with an opcn mind." (Joanna squinted at her: no, not Raquel Welch, but darn close.) "That's why Ginnie Fisher flaked out on me," she said. "She's a Gemini; they change all the time. Taureans are stable and dependable. Here's to tennis galore."