“Good evening, Henri,” Charles said.
“The chef has La croustade de veau braise au Madere tonight, very special.”
They were whisked to a corner table framed by vines decanted from a ceramic row of cabbages, beets and onions above them. The table was polished ebony, and the chairs were plush and pink. They sat in them side by side, and their candle was lit.
“Ah, Dorothy!” A woman in a black evening dress and henna red curls flew across the room. “What a night! Did Henri tell you? The veau braise au Madere is magnificent! I cried over it. It was so delicious.”
“Of course he told us, Antoinette.”
“Philippe! Come! Have a wonderful meal,” Antoinette said, already racing toward another table.
“The veal pastry, of course,” Charles told the waiter. And then they were alone.
“Oh! I was going to ask Angelo about something from the auction.”
“You said he didn’t go in.”
“Something outside. I’ll ask tomorrow.”
“Do you like La croustade de veau braise?”
“We’ll soon find out.”
In their corner, they were outside the mumble and buzz of the other diners and gymnastics of the waiters. Dorothy laid her hand on the table, free for the taking; and Charles took it, and held it. The candle flame danced.
“I want to meet Karen Liu,” Charles said.
“What?” Dorothy straightened, and looked at him. “The congresswoman? Why?”
“I want to see what kind of person she is.”
Dorothy adjusted to the subject, smiling and frowning, both. “You’re worried about the checks.”
“In many ways.”
“Madame.” The veal had arrived. They ate.
“Well, it is the best La croustade de veau braise au Madere I’ve ever had,” Charles said.
“The only one you’ve ever had?”
“If there had been another, I would have remembered.”
“I’d have to say the same,” she said. And then, “Tell me more about Derek Bastien.”
“Yes. Let me see. Derek was a collector.”
“There must be more to him than what he owned.”
“I don’t mean just that. But he certainly owned a lot. He lived in a grand house and everything in it was special.”
“It was in Northwest, wasn’t it?”
“Yes, in Foxhall. The floor was Italian marble. The wallpaper was a replica of Thomas Jefferson’s. Everything was like that. His desk was originally Alphonso Taft’s.”
“Taft?” Dorothy smiled. “Is that a relation of President Taft?”
“His father. Alphonso was Attorney General in the 1870s. Derek didn’t buy things; he acquired them.”
“That’s the desk you were talking about.”
“Yes. It was typical. If he bought a toothbrush, it would probably have been ivory and once belonged to a Duke-or to the man who invented toothpaste.”
Dorothy poked her veal pastry. “He must have been independently wealthy.”
“He was, actually,” Charles said.
“How nice for him,” she said. “Did he have to work, then?”
“No. It was more of a hobby.”
“Did you say something about the Attorney General?”
“Deputy Assistant Attorney General, and Derek was not that person. That person is named John Borchard, and Derek was that person’s chief of staff.”
“So this Mr. Borchard person must work for the Assistant Attorney General.”
Charles shook his head. “No. The Deputy Assistant Attorney General reports to the Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General, who reports to the Assistant Attorney General, who reports to the Attorney General.”
“Charles, that’s ridiculous.”
“They have that whole big building to fill. This particular nest of Deputies was in charge of pushing Congress on laws the Justice Department was interested in.”
“It sounds very bureaucratic.”
“That would be an understatement. He only did it as a game. He liked to play games.”
“You played chess with him?” Dorothy said.
“Yes. We would talk and play chess. Move and countermove and strategy.”
“That job isn’t my idea of a game.”
“Not exactly mine either. But Derek thrived on it.”
“How was he connected with Karen Liu?”
“I had Morgan look her up. She is on the House Judiciary Committee. She must have worked with Derek fairly often.”
And after fending off dessert, they were again on the street and the sky was polished ebony, reflecting the lights of the town in its stars.
“Home?” Charles said.
“Please,” Dorothy said, and they passed the incandescent shop windows and the curtained sitting-room windows; and where old trees reached over an even older street, and old brick sidewalks led past even older brick townhouses, they came to their own steps and front door.
“Were you serious?” Dorothy asked when they were inside, turning on their own sitting-room lights. “How do you meet a congresswoman?”
“I’ll call and ask.”
“They won’t let you in.”
“Then I won’t go. And if she does let me in, I will go.”
“But after that?”
“I will go on, wherever the wind blows.”
Dorothy settled into a deeply plush wingback chair beside the fireplace and opened a book from the table beside it. Above the mantel was a framed photograph of a much younger two of them and a teenage boy, the same face on Dorothy’s desk. “You will be tilting at windmills.”
Charles took his own book from the table. “I’ve always wanted to do that.”
“What do you think, Charles? Is Locke the greatest of the English enlightenment?”
“Now, come, Derek. You ask those questions just to be provocative. There’s no answer to that.”
“Who would rank with him, then? And don’t say Hume, he’s Scottish.”
“Newton.”
“Gravity is nice, but I’m speaking socially, politically.”
“I’m speaking philosophically. There are laws that govern nature, and laws that govern man’s nature. The Enlightenment isn’t limited to politics.”
“But, Charles! The end of philosophy is politics.”
“Politics puts an end to philosophy, if that’s what you mean. It’s hardly the intellectual end.”
“But politics is the practical end. And the practical purpose. What other use does philosophy have? Not personal, not for most people.”
“It is personal for them, Derek. They don’t call it philosophy. Most people call it values, or life purpose.”
“And for most people it’s a muddle. John Locke was concerned with the practical government of men, not some amorphous cloud of personal morals and beliefs.”
“Morals were vital to him!”
“An Enlightenment philosopher, Charles? He was far past religion.”
“Do you know his epitaph?”
“I believe I do.”
“Let me try to remember. There’s the part that says, ‘Of good life, you have an example in the gospel, should you desire it; of vice, would there were none for you; of mortality, surely you have one here and everywhere, and