day and be content, I don’t know. Lazarus complex.” He grinned, which did wonders for his already striking face. “Oh, how upset he was when I told him jogging to work in the mornings was not going to happen! But he managed to sit on his rage.”
She giggled, an attractive sound. “You’d think it would occur to the jogger that having to smell his B.O. after he jogs doesn’t make him an ideal work companion.” She sobered. “It’s his poor wife I feel sorriest for.”
“Robin? That nonentity? Why?”
“Because Addison Forbes treats her like a servant, Bob. Yes, he does! The lengths she has to go to to find food he’ll eat! And washing smelly clothes – she has no kind of life.”
“That sounds rather petty to me, dear.”
“Yes, I suppose it does, but she’s – well, not the world’s brightest person, and Addison makes her feel it. Sometimes I’ve caught him looking sideways at her and had the heebie-jeebies – I swear he hates her, really hates her!”
“It can happen when a medical student has to marry a nurse to get through,” Smith said rather dryly. “There’s no intellectual equality, and after he makes his mark, she’s an embarrassment.”
“You’re such a snob.”
“No, a pragmatist. I’m right.”
“So okay, maybe you do have a point, but it’s a pitiless attitude just the same,” Eliza said valiantly. “I mean, even in their own home he locks her out! There they have this gorgeous turret with a widow’s walk overlooking the harbor, and he won’t let her up there! What is it, Bluebeard’s chamber?”
“Evidence of her untidiness, and his obsession with order. I lock you out of the basement, don’t forget.”
“You’ll get no complaints from me about that, but I do think you’re too hard on the boys. They’re way past the destructive age now. Why not let them go down?”
His jaws clamped, hardening his face. “The boys are barred from the basement permanently, Eliza.”
“Then it isn’t fair, because you spend every free second you have down there. You ought to spend more time with the boys, so let them share your folly.”
“I wish you wouldn’t refer to it as a folly!”
She changed the subject; he had that obdurate look now, he wasn’t about to listen. “Is this murder really such a problem, Bob? I mean, it can’t possibly have anything to do with the Hug.”
“I agree, dear, but the police think otherwise,” said Smith mournfully. “Would you believe that we’ve been fingerprinted? Lucky we’re a research lab. The ink came off in xylene.”
Walt Polonowski, to his wife, his tone ungracious.
“Have you seen my red-checkered jacket?”
She paused in her rounds of the kitchen, Mikey straddling her hip, Esther clinging to her skirt, and looked at him in mingled scorn and exasperation. “Christ almighty, Walt, it can’t be the hunting season yet!” she snapped.
“Just around the corner. I’m going up to the cabin this weekend to get it ready – and that means I need my jacket – and I can’t find it because it isn’t where it ought to be.”
“Nor are you.” She put Mikey in his highchair and Esther on a chair with a fat cushion, then hollered for Stanley and Bella. “Dinner’s ready!”
A boy and a girl galloped into the room, whooping that they were starving. Mom was a great cook who never made them eat things they didn’t like – no spinach, no carrots, no cabbage unless she’d made it into coleslaw.
Walter sat at one end of the long table, Paola at its other end where she could spoon slop into Mikey’s mouth, open like a bird’s, and correct Esther’s table manners, still far from perfect. “The other thing I can’t stand,” she said as soon as everyone was eating, “is your selfishness. It would be great to have somewhere to take the kids on a weekend, but no! It’s
“You’re right when you say the cabin is mine,” he said coldly, cutting his very good lasagna with a fork. “My grandfather left me the cabin, Paola – to me, and me alone. It’s the one place where I can get away from all this mayhem!”
“Your wife and four children, you mean.”
“Yes, I do.”
“If you didn’t want four children, Walt, why didn’t you tie a knot in the goddamn thing? It takes two to tango.”
“Tango? What’s that?” asked Stanley.
“A sexy dance,” said his mother curtly.
An answer that for some reason inexplicable to Stanley caused Dad to roar with laughter.
“Shut up!” Paola growled. “Shut up, Walt!”
He wiped his eyes, put another piece of lasagna on Stanley’s empty plate and then replenished his own plate. “I am going up to the cabin on Friday night, Paola, and I won’t be home until dawn on Monday. I have a mountain of reading to do, and as God is my witness, I cannot read in this house!”
“If you’d only give up this stupid research and go into a good private practice, Walt, we could live in a house big enough for
His hand came down on the table violently; the children went still, shivered. “Just how do you know I’ve had offers, Paola?” he asked dangerously.
Her face paled, but she defied him. “You leave the letters lying around, I find them everywhere.”
“And read them. Yet you wonder why I have to get away? My mail is private, do you hear me?
Walt threw his fork down, shoved his chair away from the table and stalked from the kitchen. His wife and children stared after him, then Paola wiped Mikey’s slimed face and rose to get the ice cream and Jell-O.
There was an old mirror on the wall to one side of the fridge; Paola caught a glimpse of herself in it and felt the tears overflow. Eight years had been enough to turn the vivacious and very pretty young woman with the great body into a thin, downright plain woman who looked years older than she was.
Oh, the joy of meeting Walt, of captivating Walt, of
The quarrels, she understood, were totally destructive. They upset the children, they upset her, and they were driving Walt to seek his cabin more and more often. His cabin – she’d never even
“Oh, wow, fudge ripple!” cried Stanley.
“Fudge ripple doesn’t go with grape Jell-O,” said Bella, who was the fussy one.
According to her own lights Paola was a good mother. “Would you prefer your Jell-O and your ice cream in separate bowls, honey?”
Dr. Hideki Satsuma, letting himself into his penthouse apartment atop Holloman’s tallest building, and feeling the day’s stresses slide from his shoulders.
Eido had come home earlier than he, set everything out as his master liked, then gone ten floors down to the far less elegant apartment where he lived with his wife.
The decor was deceptively simple: walls of beaten copper sheeting; checkered doors of black wood and frail paper; one very old three-leafed screen of expressionless slit-eyed women with pompadour hairstyles and ribby parasols; a plain polished black stone pedestal that held one perfect flower in a twisted Steuben vase; glossy black wooden floors.
A cold sushi supper was laid out on the black lacquer table sunk into a well, and when he went through to his bedroom he found his kimono spread out, his Jacuzzi giving off lazy tendrils of steam, his futon down.
Bathed, fed, relaxed, he went then to the glass wall that framed his courtyard and stood absorbing its