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Abel Kills Cain,” Sarah said.

“It sounds like the name of a band.”

“It should be.”

“Hey, I like this guy,” Jonathan said.

She joked, “Don’t say that until you’ve worked with him,” and Jonathan said, “No, not the writer. I mean the guy who fell. He’s coming over here.”

Then William was upon them.

“How bad did that look?” he asked.

Jonathan said, “William, this is Sarah. Sarah, William.” Then he said, “It didn’t look bad.”

“From your lips to God’s ears.”

“As long as you’re not hurt, that’s all that matters,” said Sarah.

“Hurt my body all you want, but leave my pride alone,” William said, and Sarah replied, “I know what you mean.”

She was a touch drunk.

It was the three of them now, snaking in a line past artworks and tall bookshelves, searching for smokers. They stopped at a door that was locked, and kept going, single file, with Jonathan leading and Sarah in the middle. At times the crowd pressed in, and Jonathan had to forge a path through it. They came to an open door that led into a hallway painted dark red, and could hear voices down the hall.

“Who lives here?” William asked.

“The owner is the heir to a cosmetics fortune,” Sarah said, adding, “He’s also a very good poet.”

At the end of the hall was a room, where about eight people were gathered on and around a big bed, talking and drinking.

“Come in!” a comfortably stretched-out man, who had taken off his shoes, cried. “We’re having an argument about whether it’s ethical to live on government disability in your twenties.”

Right away, Jonathan said, “It is if you’re disabled. My ex-wife used to work with disabled kids.” Then, for Sarah’s sake, he anxiously exclaimed, “I don’t mean my ex-wife! I don’t know why I said that!”

“We’re not talking about that kind of disabled,” the man said.

“My friends and I were looking for a place to smoke,” Jonathan quickly replied.

“I think people were smoking on the terrace,” the man said.

“There’s a terrace?” Jonathan asked.

“I know where it is,” William said.

It was William’s turn to lead. They went back out and along the red hallway to the main room, and then squeezed and pushed their way diagonally through the crowd toward the terrace door. Now when Jonathan tried to touch Sarah’s shoulder, or hold her hand, she pulled away. As they were about to reach the terrace, she spun around, shouting above the party noise, “Your ex-wife?”

“I’m sorry. That was a slip.”

“She was your wife? Are you out of your mind? She was never your wife!” Then Sarah asked him, “Do you still love her?” But she didn’t wait for him to answer. She said, “I don’t even want to know.”

“I’m sorry. I’m very sorry.”

“I’ll think about it,” Sarah said.

William held the door, and she marched out onto the hot, humid terrace. Jonathan skulked behind her.

He and she and William sprawled on the patio furniture and waited for smokers, but none came. The terrace faced north, toward midtown. A large ascending moon, glowing in the sky over the Rockaways, was partly visible around the corner of the building.

“Ought I to light a joint?” Jonathan asked — now a trace of his Southern diction emerged — and William said, “Absolutely,” but Sarah, still angry, said, “Save it for later.”

He could feel a light breeze. He felt the joint in his shirt pocket. He’d known her in a distant way, through other people, mutual friends, for a long, long time — when had they first met? It had been at the wedding of his college classmate Kenneth — and they’d run into each other here and there in the ten or eleven years since, either at parties or in big groups at restaurants, that sort of thing; and, at any rate, this drawn-out, vague acquaintance had given them each the subtle feeling, once they’d begun seeing each other and sleeping together, that they somehow shared common origins, though in fact she’d grown up on the Upper East Side, the daughter of psychoanalysts, and showed a dedication to European fashion magazines — Rachel had rejected fashion as a malignant form of commercialism — that he would never, throughout their long life ahead, their marriage, come to fathom.

He overheard her whispering to William but couldn’t make out what she was saying. She and William were on a pair of low lounge chairs, off a ways from his. Above the brick terrace wall, he could see the spire of the Empire State Building. Below that, on the terrace, was Sarah’s back, turned to him. He had a view of her ass, wrapped in her cotton skirt. How much had she drunk?

Finally the terrace door opened and more people tumbled out, including William’s friends.

“We came to find you!” Kathy exclaimed, and Deborah said, “Here you are! Where have you been?”

“Exploring!” William said, then went on, “Deborah, Kathy, this is Sarah, my new pal, and you met Jonathan earlier.”

“Hi, hi,” everyone said.

Jonathan had the feeling — he was drunk enough to feel this — that, though they were all just casually meeting, they were also, after a stretch of being apart, coming into one another’s company again in a significant way: The encounter on the terrace was a homecoming.

“Is anyone smoking?” he asked, and Deborah felt about in her purse and said, “Where are my cigarettes? I just had them.”

The terrace was filling. Everywhere, people were gathering in groups of two and three and four.

Deborah practically screamed at him, “I’m sorry, I don’t know where my pack went!” and Jonathan said, “We’ll find some.”

He called, “Sarah, come sit with me,” but Sarah turned her head and said, “In a minute. I’m talking to William.”

With Rachel, all his pent-up urges to make a home and a family had begun to declare themselves — in his last year with her he’d felt a strong desire to have a child. At times this desire had come on him fiercely. He’d felt it as a pleasurable shock that rose from his knees up through his chest to the top of his head, causing him to tremble and sometimes visibly shudder. He recalled that Rachel, early in their relationship, had had an intuition that, were they to have a child, it would be a daughter. This idea of a girl had settled in him, and after a while he couldn’t conceive of a son. When Rachel left him for Richard Bishop, he’d felt bereft not only of her, of his never-to-be wife, but of the daughter that they had not had, would not have; and now a year had passed, during which he’d often felt that his chances at fatherhood had gone with her, with Rachel. Of course, this wasn’t true, he knew that, but the feeling was convincing, and much of the time he went about in a state of grief over it.

He had to take action. He would go hunting and bring back a cigarette for Sarah. He got up from the chaise and said, “Deborah, come on, let’s go find cigarettes.” He held the door for her, and she went inside ahead of him.

“Where are we going?” she asked.

She had dyed red hair and pale skin. She was about Rachel’s height and size. He hadn’t looked closely at her earlier, when William had first introduced them.

“I’m not sure,” he said. What was he doing with this woman? “We’re going to the bar,” he said.

“Lead the way,” Deborah said, and he squeezed by her and got in front, where he set to work. At one point, he got them stuck — the crowd was thick indeed — and he heard a man near him say, “You can’t just drop a bunch of rocks in a pile to make a stone wall. There’s a way to do it. It isn’t random.”

They backtracked. Now Jonathan was following. Deborah found a path and got them to the bar. She was drinking vodka.