in Simonova’s ceiling. The lies came easy; they almost always do.

“Oh, dear, yes, well, it’s an old building, leaks like a bastard in bad weather. It’s even older than I am, but it’s sound, you know. There’s just a lot of foolishness about fancifying it. They rip stuff up, they run out of money, nothing gets finished, you know? You get used to it, though, or maybe I’ve just been here too long. I was only ten years old when we came here.”

He was clearly enjoying both his smoke and his own words. Glad for company, too, I thought. Not surprised to see me or hear I was a friend of Lily’s.

“When we came here, I was just five years old. My mother wanted to live there.” He pointed to the roof of the building next door. It was maybe ten feet below us. “Number 409 Edgecombe. Everybody lived there: Mr. Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, Mr. W. E. B. Du Bois, the Duke-lived in a seven-room apartment done up all in white. When it came to building the Armstrong-they didn’t call it that until later-ours had to be just a little taller, a little grander. Built by the same brothers back in the day, built for white folk, and those two brothers, architects both of them, they went at it, raising the ante, each of them, one putting on more fancy touches than the other.” He took another puff, holding the cigarette between his thumb and forefinger like old guys sometimes do. He chuckled. “Still, we never did have anyone throw a prostitute out our building, you know, not like over there-it did happen, yes, from the roof, I believe, or out the window, over at 409. We don’t let them forget about it. You cold?” He picked up his coffee and sipped at it.

“It’s pretty cold,” I said.

“I love the winter, the snow, the cold. Always seems to me to clean up everything in the city.”

“You’re a friend of Mrs. Simonova?”

“Good friends,” he said, but he didn’t ask how she was and I got the feeling he already knew. Cigarette in hand, Hutchison leaned his elbows on the wall between us, and settled in for some more talk.

“You interested in history? I like to think I’m a kind of local historian. This building, see, we had the nine- room apartments right from the beginning, with electric refrigeration, lovely wooden floors, high ceilings, terraces. You know about this part of town we call Sugar Hill? Everything that was sweet and expensive, so they said, and it ran right up here from 145th Street. See that building?” He pointed at Edgecombe Avenue. “Billie Holiday lived over there. We had musicians and athletes. The Polo Grounds, you heard of the Giants? Greatest baseball club of all time. They let us play there as kids. I was a boy, I played stickball with Sidney Poitier and Harry Belafonte in the street, I was here when Joe Louis beat Max Schmeling and when Ray Robinson took the crown. All of Harlem just walked down to 125th Street to celebrate. You have to picture it, thousands of people, all dressed up in the best they had walking together. I used to hang out at Ray Robinson’s club, later on.” He looked at me. “Sorry, I got to catch myself when I start rambling,” he said. “It’s the curse of the old, and in this building, we’re almost all of us old now. We feed off our memories, you see.” He smoked his cigarette, the end of it glowing hot and red, then tossed the butt into an empty pail. He seemed oblivious to the cold and snow. “One young man comes along, wants to buy my apartment. He says to me, ‘Dr. Hutchison, the myth lingers on here in Sugar Hill, like smoke, or sweet perfume; I want to be part of it,’ he says, a nice young Negro fellow, excuse me, African American, lawyer, very polite, and I have to bite my lip to keep from laughing because this young man, with all his expensive clothes, is about as sweet as a cheap cigar.”

I laughed.

“Right? It’s just so much, how shall I put it delicately, horseshit,” said Dr. Hutchison. “Did you know this here, this little hilly area, this is Coogan’s Bluff? Same as the film by that name with Mr. Clint Eastwood?”

“What about Armstrong?” I said. “Did he ever live in the building?”

“You a fan of jazz music?”

“Yes.”

“For a short time, yes, I believe he did, just for a few months, but it was before we moved in. I knew his Lucille. I knew her well enough they invited us to the house in Corona over in Queens for Thanksgiving once.”

I was hanging on Dr. Hutchison’s story. Armstrong is one of my heroes.

“Louis used to hand out Swiss Kris laxative to everyone, he had a deal to represent it. He was a kind man, and he was a genius, but he was sometimes sad. Sometimes you’d catch him looking out a window, a cigarette in his hand, and a faraway look on his face. You could hear it when he played sometimes. Most of the time, he just wanted everybody happy,” Hutchison said.

I thought about the house in Queens where Armstrong finally settled. It’s a little museum now where everything-the dishes, the furniture, Louis’s horn-remains just as it was when he shared it with Lucille.

For some reason, seeing it, the modest house in Corona where he had been happy, made me want to cry. All the musicians I love are long gone. I still have the music, though.

Hutchison looked over at me. “Marianna’s doing all right? Do you want to tell her I’ll come by a little later?”

“Sure,” I said.

“It’s the pain that’s the problem, of course. So unnecessary, so inhuman. Suffering, they say it’s good for you, tests your character. Such foolishness, but it’s as if some kind of fake stoicism has become our religion. Brave, they call it, when somebody’s terminal, but what choice do they have? Being brave is about choice. Pain leaves you no choice,” Dr. Hutchison said angrily.

“Do you still practice?”

“Only when I’m needed. I keep up my license, always have. I graduated Harvard Medical School, class of fifty-four. Thought I could change the world,” he said, and then, under his breath, he added, “Sure done faked myself out on that one.”

“You look after Mrs. Simonova?”

“Just help out. She has her own doctor. Matter of fact, I sent her to Lucille Bernard. She’s a lung specialist. One of the best, yes, indeed.”

“So you see Mrs. Simonova most days?”

“Some,” he said warily.

“Recently?”

An insistent voice interrupted us, calling out to Hutchison from the doorway to his terrace.

“Lionel?” It was the little woman in the yellow cap I’d seen earlier. “What’s going on out there? You talking to that damn woman? For heaven’s sake, you’ll catch your death. Now tell her to go back into her own apartment and you come home, stop your rambling on about the damn past and killing yourself with those cigarettes.” She paused briefly. “She calls you, you just jump, don’t you, boy.” Sticking her head farther out of the door, the woman saw me and said, “Who are you?”

“My wife, Celestina,” said Hutchison. He picked up the kettle, tossed the remains over one of the plants, where it hissed and steamed, and retreated into his apartment.

I had the feeling Lionel Hutchison had seen Marianna Simonova recently. I had the feeling he already knew she was dead. He had engaged me in a lot of talk to see what I knew. It had been a fishing expedition.

CHAPTER 8

Lily found me in the dead woman’s apartment looking at a photograph on the mantelpiece.

“Good shower?” I said.

“Great.” She had changed her clothes and fixed her hair. She wore a deep, soft green turtleneck, skinny black jeans, ankle boots, gold hoops in her ears, an old stainless Rolex she had been left by an uncle. I had always coveted the watch. I’ll leave it to you, she’d always said jokingly. Though I plan to live forever, she would add. In those days, when we were first together, she was unstoppable, optimistic, full of life.

Lily was the best looking woman I had met in New York, or any other place. I always remember the first time I saw her: It was a hot summer night. She was tall, almost as tall as me, long legs, red hair, blue-green eyes. Sexy. Husky voice. Smart as hell. She was a grown-up. I had never liked girls, not really. I knew right away, but for once I had let things take a little time, time for us to listen to music, go for a walk, laugh. We laughed a lot.

“You look nice,” I said.

“Thank you.” She was composed, almost disengaged. The feverish look had gone, as if she’d taken something

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