“One pair could be fawn, and the other pair could be ginger. That way we could tell which I’d worn last. And a nightie. Can I sleep with you?”
“If you don’t snore,” he told her.
“I don’t. You can’t even hear me breathing.” She threw out her chest as though to prove she did indeed breathe, tiny, conical breasts pushing impatiently against the metallic fabric of her smock. “Tomorrow night I’ll put up my hair, if you get me rollers. It would be better if you carried me, remember?”
He asked, “What if you want some tea in the middle of the night?”
“I won’t,” Tina chirped. “But if I did, I could come out and get it without waking you up. You wouldn’t have to worry about stepping on me then. Besides, I can move faster now.”
He picked her up and replaced her on his shoulder. “Is that what you work on? Tea?”
“Sometimes silly children want us to drink more tea than we can hold.”
“I won’t do that,” he promised. He recalled something a bartender had once told him, and added, “If you don’t want it, don’t drink it.”
“I like you. We’re going to have a lot of fun.”
“Not now,” he said. “Right now I’m going to take a shower, and then I’m going to bed.”
“I could have a bath in the washbowl while you’re taking your shower.”
“All right.”
“All you have to do is turn on the water for me. Not very hard. Not very hot, either.”
“All right,” he said again. He pulled up the chrome handle that stoppered the bowl, and adjusted the hot and cold knobs to produce a thin stream of tepid water.
Tina hopped from his shoulder. “Can I use your soap?”
“Sure.” He took off his shirt and tossed it in the hamper as he always did. Tina had skinned out of her metallic green smock; she had no pubic hair, but her breasts were tipped with minute pink nipples.
He turned his back to remove his trousers, and when he went into the bedroom to hang them up and get his pajamas, he debated putting on the bottoms before he returned to the bathroom. It would be useless, since he would have had to take them off again immediately.
Tina had worked up a fine lather in the washbowl. He asked if the water was too hot.
“No, it’s fine. Could you give me a drop of shampoo?”
He did, tilting the bottle just enough to pour a single emerald drop into her cupped hands.
As soon as he closed the shower door, he felt certain she would be gone when he came out. Perhaps the basin would be full of water; perhaps not. He made the spray colder and revolved beneath it, grunting because he wanted to shout.
“I’m going to use one of these little towels, okay?”
“Sure.” His next appointment with Dr. Nilson was Tuesday. Five days. He wondered whether he should call her now; she had given him her home number, though he had never used it. As he thought about that, the memory of a disheveled man in hospital pajamas playing an out-of-tune piano returned with such force that he seemed to see and hear it, seemed to feel the unyielding wood of the bench upon which he had once sat.
Tina was singing as she dried herself, singing in a voice sweet and yet so high that at times it soared beyond audibility, singing to the tune of the cracked old piano someone had donated to the hospital. No, he could not call Dr. Nilson. He couldn’t even mention Tina when he went on Tuesday.
He reached for a towel.
In bed Tina said, “I can sleep on top of the covers. But it would be better if I slept under them. I’d stay warmer.”
He lifted the blankets for her, and she snuggled beside him. After a time he said, “How old are you, Tina?” He could just see her in the faint light leaking past the blind.
The doll turned over and yawned theatrically, an elfin hand covering her mouth, a tiny arm stretching above her head. “How old are you?”
He told her, then added a year. “My birthday was last month. I’d forgotten.”
“That’s old.”
“I know,” he said.
“I don’t think you’re that old. I’m not.”
“I didn’t think you were.”
“What did you get for your birthday?”
“Nothing. I really didn’t pay any attention to it.”
“Didn’t Mama and Daddy give you anything?”
He shook his head. “My mother’s been dead for a long time, and I haven’t seen my father for ten or twelve years.”
“But he still loves you.”
“No, he doesn’t. He never did.”
“Yes, he does.”
“Tina, you’ve never met him.”
“I know about Daddies, though. And you don’t.”
“All right,” he said, strangely comforted.
“What did you give him for his birthday?”
The question surprised him; he had to think for a moment. “Nothing. I never do.”
“You could give him a big kiss.”
“I don’t think he’d like that.”
“Yes, he would. I’m right and you’re wrong.”
“Perhaps,” he said.
“Next birthday, what would you like?”
He told her about the desk.
“I think you should get that for your next birthday. I’ll tell Daddy.”
“It’s been sold already.”
“Maybe the lady would sell it, too.”
He nodded to himself. “Maybe she would. Would you like some more tea, Tina?”
“Yes!”
He threw back the covers, rose, and switched on the light. By a route he could not quite follow, Tina leaped from the bed to the dresser. “Is your tea set in here?”
“I don’t have a tea set,” he told her. “Not yet, anyway. I was looking for this check book.”
“I can’t read. I haven’t been to school.”
“I’ll read it for both of us,” he said. “I’ve got thirty-two hundred dollars. That’s more than the desk cost.”
“You should have bought it.”
“You’re right. Now let’s have some tea and talk about it. Do you think she’d sell it at a profit? Where do you think it ought to go?”
“Not facing the TV.” Tina hopped onto his shoulder. “So you’ll do your school work.”
“Not in a corner,” he told her. “I hate things in corners. Against the window.”
“All right!”
He turned up the burner under the pan of water, rinsed out Tina’s demitasse cup, and found a cup, a saucer, and a spoon for himself. There were only three tea bags left in the canister. “I’ll have to get more tea tomorrow,” he said.
“You sure will.”
“Tina, do you know a girl named Lara?”
“I don’t know anybody but you.”
“You remind me of her. I used to be in love with Lara—that’s why I bought you. Lara was the woman in front of the fireplace.”
“I don’t think you told me about that.”
“But I lost her, somehow. I lost her walking through the snow.”
“You have to dress really warm for a bluskery day.”
He nodded. “I bought the coat, and some other things. I got some money, somehow, and I put it in the bank. That’s where most of the thirty-two hundred’s from.”
“Maybe Lara gave it to you,” Tina ventured.
“No,” he said. And then, “Yes, maybe she did.”
The Desk
“I’d like to talk to you about it,” he said. “That’s all.”
The ugly woman’s voice crackled from the earpiece. “We’re talking now.”
“I’d rather do it face to face. I could come out to your house any evening that’s convenient.”
Suspiciously: “Isn’t it genuine?”
He inhaled deeply, wanting to lie—and found he could not. “It’s perfectly genuine, I’m sure. But it’s Indian, even though it was made in the British style. Indian things don’t command high prices, as a rule.”