“You call the cops?”
“No.”
“Why?”
“Velveeta said not to.”
“This happened last night?”
“Yesterday evening. Around seven.”
“And you’ve been fuckin’ her ever since, huh?”
Citron sighed. “She just wanted to let you know.”
“Hell, I don’t mind. She’s thirty, going on thirty-one. She can do any goddamn thing she wants to. But you say you’re a friend of hers, huh?”
“That’s right.”
“Okay. I’m gonna take the next flight out to L.A. I want you to meet me at the airport. You. Not her. My missus will call back and tell you what flight it is. I want you to rent a limousine with a driver and a Hertz Ford. A big Ford.”
“I don’t have a credit card.”
“Goddamn, she sure can pick ’em. Use her credit card. She’s got credit cards coming out the kazoo.”
“Why two cars?” Citron said.
“Because I never travel alone.”
“Who’s coming with you?”
“Who?” Keats said. “My two French niggers, that’s who.”
It was 7:15 A.M. when the phone rang at the crucial moment during Draper Haere’s ritualistic preparation of his breakfast. He picked up the kitchen’s yellow wall telephone, said, “Call back in five minutes,” hung up, and used the stainless-steel spatula to flip his two frying eggs over gently.
At 7:20 the phone rang again. Haere rose from the table, again picked up the long-corded yellow phone, this time in his left hand, sat back down, cut into one of the eggs with a fork, and was pleased to see it had been cooked to perfection. He then said, “Hello.”
The man’s voice said, “Is this Draper Haere?”
“Himself.”
“What?”
“Yes, this is Haere,” he said and forked some grits mixed with egg yolk into his mouth.
“How soon can you get to a pay phone?”
Haere clamped the phone between his left shoulder and ear, put down the fork, picked up a biscuit, broke it open, and spread both halves with butter. “I don’t know,” he said. “An hour. A day. Maybe a week. Why?” He took a large bite of the buttered biscuit and chewed it with pleasure. Haere rarely found anything to fault in his cooking.
“Well, fuck it then,” the man said. “I’ll just have to risk it.”
“Risk what?”
“Telling you who I am.”
“Okay. Who?”
“Drew Meade.”
Haere had a square inch of homemade sausage about halfway to his mouth. He put the fork down, then picked it up again, examined the morsel of sausage carefully, put it into his mouth, and chewed it thoroughly before speaking. “Let’s talk.”
“Fine,” Meade said. “Where?”
“My place in an hour.”
“What’s the address?”
Haere told him.
“You remember me, huh?” Meade said.
“I remember you.”
“Yeah,” Meade said. “I figured you would.”
After the connection was broken, Haere rose and placed the yellow wall phone back on its hook. He turned, looked down at his partly eaten breakfast, picked up the plate, and started to dump its contents into the sink, but paused. On the plate was an untouched biscuit and a leftover sausage patty. He sliced the biscuit open, placed the sausage patty between the two halves, and wrapped it up in wax paper. He knew he would be hungry later, and cold biscuit and sausage would be not only good, but also comforting. It had often been his lunch or even dinner in Birmingham. My heritage, he thought, as he turned on the faucet, again picked up the plate, scraped its contents into the sink, and switched on the garbage disposal. As he watched what was left of his breakfast being ground up and sluiced away, Haere thought about his dead father and the man who long ago had accused him of political heresy. Haere discovered there was no anger left, or even any bitterness. Nothing now remained other than a kind of cold curiosity. It would be interesting to see how Drew Meade had survived the years. It would be even more interesting to find out just what it was he had for sale. If anything. Haere decided a witness to the meeting would be both useful, and, indeed, necessary. He turned back to the wall phone, picked it up, and called Morgan Citron.
Citron answered on the first ring. “I was just about to call you,” he said after Haere identified himself.
“What’ve you got?” Haere said.
“I called Singapore yesterday. Also New York. Then I tried to call you, but couldn’t get you.”
“I was in a meeting,” Haere said.
“The guy I talked to in Singapore can be described as either a highly reliable source or an authoritative spokesman. Take your pick.”
“I like authoritative spokesman.”
“Right. Well, according to him both the CIA and the FBI were looking all over hell for your Drew Meade in Singapore. When they couldn’t find him, they bought themselves an Anglo body, dumped it in the ocean, let it be found, and then swore it was the late Mr. Meade.”
“Why?”
“That my authoritative source wouldn’t say — or didn’t know. Anyway, Meade’s supposedly dead and buried. AP made it official with a two-paragraph story they filed election day — or the day after, Singapore time. My authoritative source didn’t believe a word of it.”
“He’s right,” Haere said. “I’m meeting with Meade at my place in about forty-five minutes.”
“I’ll be damned.”
“I need a witness.”
“Me.”
“Right.”
“Fine,” Citron said, “but I have to meet someone at the airport at noon.”
“Anything to do with this?”
There was a long pause before Citron answered. “I don’t really know,” he said.
Gladys Citron turned from the medicine cabinet and handed Drew Meade her razor. He had already brushed his teeth with one of her spare toothbrushes. “Didn’t you bring anything?” she said.
“Just me, darlin’.”
She leaned against the bathroom doorjamb and watched as Meade soaped his face and began shaving with quick, impatient strokes. She was wearing one of her Chanel suits, the dark-gray, almost black one. The Legion d’Honneur ribbon was in place on the lapel. Meade was bare to the waist. She could detect no flab — not even at sixty-three.
“What do you do, work out?”
“Me? Christ, no.”
“How do you stay in shape?”
“I don’t sit around on my butt, that’s how. People get out of shape because they sit around on their butts. You gotta keep moving. That’s one thing you can say about me: I’ve kept moving.”
“When’re you going to move out of here?”
Meade looked back over his shoulder at her and grinned. The white soap made his teeth seem more yellow than they really were. “What’s the matter, Gladys, not used to a man around the house?”
“Younger men, usually.”
“We didn’t do too bad last night for a couple of old crocks. I mean, you still know how to wiggle pretty good.” He pressed up his nose with a thumb and shaved under it. When he was done, he rinsed off the razor, put it back in the medicine cabinet, and turned. “You know, I was just thinking about the first time you and me made it — back in ’forty-four just outside Dijon. Remember?”
“Vaguely.”
“They’d just co-opted you into OSS to liaise with the Resistance and I was your new wire man.”
“I remember.”
“We stayed at that farm, that dairy farm, the one where you’d stashed that kid of yours. Whatever happened to him, anyway?”
“He’s around.”
“I remember he was only four or five then and didn’t speak anything but French. He went on to become some kind of reporter, didn’t he? A hotshot, I heard.”