“No way.”
Kathleen phoned Mr. Morrie. He invited her over to his house and sat with her in the garden, where he knew that Libby could see him from her bedroom window.
“I want to know if you were there when the safe was opened, Mr. Morrie.”
“It pains me right here to tell you this,” Mr. Morrie said, hand on his heart, “but there was no envelope.”
“Couldn’t Harvey have pinched it earlier?”
“He didn’t have the combination to the safe.”
“Maybe Mr. B. just never got the time to put the envelope in the safe and it’s still among his papers in the house.”
“Didn’t I look?”
“Libby could have it.”
“Kathleen,” Mr. Morrie said, tears welling in his eyes, “forgive me, but I can’t stand to see you suffering like this. I have to tell you something hurtful. He also promised an envelope to a young lady in the New York office.”
“The hell he did.”
“I’m sorry.”
“Christ.”
“I’m so ashamed.”
“Who?”
“I can’t say. I gave my word.”
She began to sob. Mr. Morrie took her in his arms. “Bernie, may he rest in peace, was a complicated man.”
“Was it Nora Weaver?”
“Why torture yourself?”
“Shit.”
“You know what? I’m going to go through his papers in the house again tomorrow. From top to bottom. And I bet you I find the envelope, just like he promised.”
“Did Lionel have the combination to the safe?”
“I’m such a fool. Why didn’t I think of that? I’ll phone him.”
“Forget it.”
“Let me give it a try.”
“There never was an envelope, and even if there was, I don’t want it any more.”
“I appreciate your feelings in this matter,” Mr. Morrie said, freshening her drink.
“I’m fifty-three years old now.”
“You don’t look a day over forty.”
Kathleen burst out laughing. She blew her nose and wiped her eyes. “And what will you do now that Lionel has cut you out?”
“Say, why don’t we open a bar together downtown? Right on Crescent Street. Kate’s and Morrie’s.”
“Seriously.”
“Can I let you in on a secret?”
“Please.”
“After all these years my Barney came to see me on his way to the Maritimes. He was going salmon fishing. A guest of the minister of trade. Isn’t that something?”
“I hope he didn’t come to borrow money.”
“Barney is an outstanding person. Let me tell you that boy has more ideas …”
“So I’ve heard.”
“He’s in the furniture business in North Carolina. Very big. But, now that the ice has been broken, I’m hoping that he’ll come in with me in oil and other investments I can’t speak about yet. You come to work for us you name the salary.”
“Thank you,” Kathleen said, kissing him on the cheek, “but I think not.”
“Hector will drive you back to your place. But you know what? This is your second home. You’re feeling blue you hop into a taxi and come to dinner.”
Five minutes later the phone rang in Mr. Morrie’s study. “What did she want?” Libby demanded.
“I was hoping to get rid of her before you saw her here.”
“Money?”
“A letter of reference.”
“You give her a letter of reference it should be to the madam of a whorehouse.”
“You think I don’t appreciate your sentiments in this matter?”
“I don’t want to see her on the property again.”
“Whatever you say. Now would you like to come over tonight and watch ‘Dragnet’ with us?”
“It would hardly be the same,” she said, hanging up.
Mr. Morrie unlocked the top desk drawer and took out his private address book. He reached Moses at The Caboose. “Poor Kathleen O’Brien is very depressed,” he said. “I think it would be nice if you took her to lunch.”
Six
Moses knew that he could stay with Sam and Molly Birenbaum in Georgetown, but he opted for privacy, checking into the Madison instead. An hour later he took a taxi to Georgetown.
Sam, his caramel eyes shiny, hugged Moses. He held him tight. “Moishe. Moishe Berger. Shall I offer you a drink?”
“I’m on Antabuse.”
“Glad to hear it. Tea, then?”
“Please.”
Looking to warm the coals, Sam reminisced about the table with the crocheted tablecloth in the cold-water flat on Jeanne Mance Street. Then he got into London, their halcyon days, starting into a story about Lucy Gursky. Remembering, he stopped short.
“Sam, relax. It’s okay to talk about Lucy. Now tell me about Philip and the others too of course.”
There were three children. Marty, Ruth and Philip. Ruth was putting in a year at the Sorbonne. Neither of the boys, knock wood, were in Vietnam. Marty was at MIT and Philip, having dropped out for a couple of years, working as a bartender in San Francisco, was at Harvard. “He’s visiting us now.”
“Terrific. Where is he?”
“Out.”
“Oh.”
“He’s gay,” Sam said, slapping down the gauntlet and waiting for Moses’s reaction, pleading with his eyes.
“Well, he isn’t the only one.”
“I could be appropriately liberal about it if it were another man’s son, but it’s an abomination in one of my own.”
“I understand.”
“No, you don’t understand. It’s not that I’m prejudiced against faggots, it’s just that I don’t like them.” Sam poured himself a Scotch. A large one. “He wouldn’t come home for the weekend unless he could bring his Adams House sweetie-poo with him. What could I say? We hadn’t seen him in months. I was determined to behave myself. I wasn’t going to make a crack about his boyfriend’s earring or his black silk shirt open to his pupik at breakfast. We had words this morning. I don’t think it necessary for them to skinnydip in the pool. Molly looks out of the window it breaks her heart.”
“There’s a pool?”
“Hold tight. There’s a pool and the black maid you’ve already seen and a cook and stock options and a condo in Vail and a tax-shelter scam I don’t understand, but I’m sure will land me in the slammer one day. That’s the way it is, Moishe.”
Suddenly Molly was there. “Moses, it’s unfair how you never answer a letter but drop in and out of our lives once in five years.”
They ate at Sans Souci, senators and congressmen and others in search of prime-time exposure on the network stopping at their table to pay obeisance, whispering in Sam’s ear, delivering the latest Watergate scuttlebutt. He’s going to be impeached. No, he’s resigning. He’s no longer playing with all the dots on his dice. Henry told me. Len says. Kay assured me. Sam, Molly sensed, was not so much pleased as apprehensive at such a tangible display of his importance. He was waiting for Moses to pronounce. The less he said the more Sam drank. Liquor, as had always been the case, rendered him foolish. Three publishers, Sam let out, were pursuing him to do a Watergate book. Moses nodded. “So,” Sam said, deflated, “I didn’t become the Tolstoy of my generation.…”
“Did you, Moses?”
Moses shook his head, no.
“Do you still write short stories?” she asked.
“Canada has no need of another second-rate artist.”
“Gerald Murphy,” Molly said, pouncing.
“Clever Molly.”
“Hey, we’ve been through the fire together,” Sam pleaded. “We’re all friends here. What brings you to Washington? You still haven’t told us.”
Moses explained that he wanted to see raw tapes, everything available at the network, shot at the Watergate hearings or during Nixon’s press conferences. He wasn’t interested in the footage that had actually been shown, but the out-takes, especially panning shots of onlookers. “I’m looking for somebody who might have been there.”