“Excuse me?”
“A cell phone. If you do, you might want to turn it off.”
She took out her iPhone and stared at it, unsure of what to do. Gerry Davis took it from her, powered it down, and handed it back. “It’s better that way. For the moment, at least.”
When Gerry Davis explained that he was going to take her back to her apartment, where there would be someone else from the embassy to stay the night with her, she realized that he was smart, this Gerry Davis. Though he knew her future had just evaporated, he was giving her precise, manageable plans to carry her forward. Until the next day, at least.
Later, she would ask herself how she could make such judgments—that Gerry Davis was smart, that the policemen didn’t know what to do with themselves, and that she’d misjudged the parameters of a tragic event. After what she’d been through, she shouldn’t have been able to see past her own fingertips, but she could see clearly to the end of the room where Daniel himself, in a smeared apron, was giving a statement to a uniformed cop. Why were her eyes so clear and her senses still acute?
One of the policemen, an older Hungarian in civilian clothes, introduced himself as Andras Something and squatted in front of her chair. In a heavy accent, he asked a few questions: Did she recognize the killer? Had he said anything that might explain why he had come tonight? She tried to give him useful answers, but in the midst of her words she began to spill too much information; she couldn’t help herself. “Beforehand, we were talking, Emmett and me. About the affair I had. He was hurt, really hurt. I don’t know—maybe this had something to do with it … do you think? I mean, it lasted so long, right under his nose. Do you think that maybe—”
She felt a hand on her shoulder. Gerry Davis said, “I think that’s enough for now.”
Andras Something climbed to his feet, knees cracking like a log fire, and thanked her for her help. Then Gerry Davis drove her home, across the Chain Bridge, away from the clotted cityscape of Pest into the greener Buda hills, keeping his Ford full of chatter about what to expect, what the name of her babysitter would be, and who she should expect to hear from tomorrow. Anything and everything to keep from touching on an hour ago. As he spoke, though, she heard the killer’s voice: I here for you.
Fiona Vale was already in the apartment when they arrived. She was in her fifties, from Nebraska, and told Sophie that she knew Emmett well. She knew better than to start offering assessments of her husband—no “a lovely man” or “he will be missed.” Just the fact that she knew him, brief condolences, and a plate of chicken breast, potatoes, and grilled asparagus that she had picked up on her way over. Sophie was famished, but she didn’t touch the food at first. She headed toward the liquor cabinet. Predicting everything, Fiona cut her off and asked what she wanted to drink. “Take a load off. I’ve got this.”
Gerry Davis had left by then, and soon they were settled in the quiet living room with glasses of Emmett’s Jim Beam. Before they could speak again, the kitchen phone rang, and Fiona went to get it. She reappeared after a moment. “It’s Glenda Bennett—you up to talking?”
Sophie heard: Rhubarb-rhubarb.
“Sure,” she told Fiona Vale.
She heard: Bang! Then: Bang! A wet sound.
“Oh my God, Sophie. Oh my God. Ray just told me.”
She soon found herself trying to calm Glenda; her friend was hysterical.
“I’m coming over, Sophie. I’m calling the taxi right now.”
“No, Glen. Don’t. I’ve got someone looking after me, and I just want to sleep now. Really.”
“But it’s not right. I just. Sophie.”
“Tomorrow. Tomorrow you’ll come over and spend a couple hours listening to me, okay? Right now, I’m exhausted.”
“Well, let me do something,” Glenda said, and from the background came her husband’s voice.
“Let me get to sleep.”
“Okay,” she said, then: “Just a sec. Ray wants the phone.”
Raymond Bennett, consul general, came on. “Sophie, I know you want to get some rest. I only want you to know how shocked we are by this, and that we’re here for you. Anything you need.”
“Thank you, Ray.”
“This is being investigated from the top. We’re going to have answers soon. Who’s there with you?”
“Fiona Vale.”
“Fee’s great. Ask her for anything you need, and if there’s something she can’t take care of don’t hesitate to call.”
“Thanks, Ray. I should probably just go to sleep.”
“Absolutely. Good night, then.”
But even after the whisky, a few bites of the chicken and vegetables, another whisky with Fiona, and a hot shower followed by Fiona tucking her into bed at one in the morning—even after all that, she lay in the darkness, staring. She saw it again, the endless loop of I here for you, rhubarb-rhubarb, and bang! She also heard every early morning noise: cars passing on the street, a dog in pain somewhere, people laughing on their way home from bars, and the fan of Emmett’s laptop on his side of her now-enormous bed—that last sound was the worst.
She got up and closed the computer, waiting the extra minute until the fan shut off, then heard more street noises—but they were in her head. They were Cairo voices, the jumble of melodic arguments and the muezzins’ calls to prayer that she remembered from that dusty hotel room in Dokki where she and Stan, after their groping, lay sweaty and exhausted. She, outlining her plans for the rest of the day. He, listening with odd satisfaction to the unimaginative details of her life, for she never shared the imaginative ones.
Then it came. It wasn’t unexpected, but it still took her off guard, the cold shiver running from head to heel, the twist in her stomach, and then the weeping. It leapt upon her, loud and wet and very messy. It was real, and for a moment she believed it was the most real thing she had done in her life.
She would never see him again. She would never sit across from him at dinner, never touch him or worry over his inability to match his own clothes. She would never listen to his soft snores, and she would never feel the length and weight of his body on hers. They had tapered off over the last years, sex coming along rarely, but she’d always thought that they were going through a phase from which they would inevitably emerge, just as they had emerged from Cairo intact—or mostly intact. There would be no more phases, no more of the rhythms of living with a man who, for twenty years, had been the central figure in her life.
There was a hole in her stomach and an empty space in her skull that nothing and no one, certainly not Stan, would ever be able to fill. And guilt. So much damned guilt.
She wasn’t sure how long this went on. As she gradually recovered she realized that her pillow was soaking wet, so she took Emmett’s pillow, and that brought on fresh tears. Eventually, she went to the bathroom for tissues and stared into the mirror, wiping at her splotchy face. She hardly even saw herself, but the reflection helped. The tears began to dry. She took a breath.
He’s dead.
It’s your fault.
It’s Stan’s fault.
In that moment this seemed reasonable—that her yearlong affair had pulled that trigger—though she knew it wasn’t true. Her affair only ensured that Emmett’s final moments would be miserable.
Stan had called Emmett. Actually called him, months afterward, to announce his love for her. Stan had always been old-fashioned, but Jesus.
She returned to the bedroom, flipped on the bedside lamp, and took out her phone. She turned it on, watching the start-up screen until it lit up with messages: six missed calls, two from Glenda, one from Ray, and one each from other friends, Mary, Tracey, and Anita. She ignored the voice mails and went through her contacts until she found Stan. Two rings and, as always, he was a man who answered with identification, even at three in the morning: “Stan Bertolli.” Voice achingly familiar.