'How soon can you find out and keep me out of it?'
'Maybe a day, maybe a week. It might be an hour if we could get to Doh Ray Me.'
'Who is Doh Ray Me?'
'His wife. Widow. Of course you don't call her that now, not to her face. She's holed up. She won't see anybody, not even the DA. Her doctor eats and sleeps there. They say. What are you staring for? Is my nose crooked?'
' be damned.'
I stood up. 'Of course. Why the hell didn't I remember? I must be in shock. See you tomorrow night-I hope. Forget I was here.'
I went.
There was no phone booth on that floor, so I went to the elevator. On the way down I pinched my memory. Having met only about a tenth of the characters -poets from Bolivia, pianists from Hungary, girls from Wyoming or Utah-who had been given a hand by Lily Rowan, I had never seen Dora Miller. Arriving in New York from Kansas, she had been advised by an artist's agent to change her name to Doremi, and when nobody had pronounced it right, had changed it again to Doraymee. You would think that a singer with that name would surely go far, but at the time Lily had told me about her she had been doing TV commercials. Though the Times may not have mentioned that Mrs. Harvey H. Bassett had once been Doraymee, the Gazette must have, and I missed it. Shock.
I entered one of the ten booths on the ground floor, shut the door, and dialed a number, and after eight rings, par for that number, a voice came. 'Hello?'
She always makes it a question.
'Hello. The top of the afternoon to you.'
'Well. I haven't rung your number even once, so you owe me a pat on the head or a pat where you think it would do the most good. Are you alive and well? Are you at home?'
'I'm alive. I'm also ten short blocks from you. Only a ten-minute walk if you feel like company.'
'You are not company. As you know, we are still trying to decide what each other is. I speak English. Lunch is nearly ready. Cross on the green.'
We hung up. That's one of the many good points: we hung up.
Even with another tenant, it would be a pleasure to enter that penthouse on East Sixty-third Street, but of course with another tenant it wouldn't be furnished like that. The only two things that I definitely would scrap are the painting on the living-room wall by de Kooning and the electric fireplace in the spare bedroom. I also like the manners. Lily nearly always opens the door herself, and she doesn't lift a hand when a man takes his coat off in the vestibule. We usually don't kiss for a greeting, but that time she put her hands on my arms and offered, and I accepted. More, I returned the compliment.
She backed up and demanded, 'Where were you and what were you doing at half past one Monday night, October twenty-eighth?'
'Try again,' I said. 'You fumbled it. Tuesday morning, October twenty-ninth. But first I want to confess. I'm here under false pretenses. I came because I need help.'
She nodded. 'Certainly. I knew that when you said the top of the afternoon to me. You only remind me that I'm Irish when you want something. So you're in a hurry and we'll go straight to the table. There's enough.'
She led the way through the living room to the den, where the desk and files and shelves and typewriter stand barely leave room enough for a table that two can eat on. As we sat, Mimi came with a loaded tray.
'Go ahead,' Lily said.
I want to like my manners too, so I waited until Mimi had finished serving and gone and we had taken bites of celery. Also, at Lily's table, especially when no guest had been expected, often not even Fritz would have known what was on his plate just by looking at it, so I looked at her with my eyebrows up.
She nodded. 'You've never had it. We're trying it and haven't decided. Mushrooms and soy beans and black walnuts and sour cream. Don't tell him. If you can't get it down, Mimi will do a quick omelet.
Even he admitted she could do an omelet. At the ranch.'
I had taken a forkload. It didn't need much chewing, not even the walnuts, because they had been pulverized or something. When it was down I said, 'I want to make it perfectly clear that-' 'Don't do that! I've told you. Even a joke about him turns my stomach.'
'You're too careless with pronouns. Your hims. Your first him's opinion of your second him is about the same as yours. So is mine. As for this mix, I'm like you, I haven't decided. I admit it's different.'
I loaded a fork.
'I'll just watch your face. Tell me why you came.'
I waited until the second forkful was with the first. 'As I said, I need help. You once told me about a girl from Kansas named Doraymee. Remember?'
'Of course I do. I saw her yesterday.'
'You sow her? Yesterday? You saw Mrs. Harvey H. Bassett?'
'Yes. You must know about her husband, since you always read about murders. She phoned me yesterday afternoon and said she was-' She stopped with her mouth half open. 'What is this? She asked about you, and now you're asking about her. What's going on?'
My mouth was half open too. 'I don't believe it. Are you saying that Mrs. Bassett phoned you to ask