“I don’t get it, Lucy. What are we looking at?”
Lucy is laughing, eyes rounded, triumphant. She grabs me. “You don’t get it. Okay, let’s zoom in. What do you see now?”
“It looks like a weather front right on top of Feliciana. But there is no front.
“Look again.” Zooming closer.
There is Feliciana as before and there are the clouds, closer, grainier. Now I see it. But surely not. It can’t be. The clouds are particulate, galactic clouds of tiny twinkling stars, as if the screen had been hit by a handful of Christmas glitter. Part of Baton Rouge is a regular snowfield.
“Do you mean to tell me—” I begin, hardly believing what I see.
“I mean to tell you,” says Lucy, face close, big-eyed, holding on to me like a ten-year-old.
“—that each dot is—”
“—a case of heavy sodium. I only asked for sodium. Every dot on that graphic is a person. You’re looking at the actual geographical distribution of your syndrome.”
There is nothing to do but gaze. “That’s beautiful,” I say finally. “You’re beautiful.”
“I know! I know!” She hugs me. “Oh, I’m so sorry about— but I’m also so glad about—”
I say nothing, gaze at the screen.
“Zoom back.”
“Okay.”
A single rack of clouds hangs over Feliciana like a warm front backed up from the Gulf. Strange: the lakefront is mostly clear, even though it’s high-density population. Baton Rouge? Northwest quadrant of the city cloudy, central and south lightly speckled, a scattering of star clusters over Feliciana.
“What’s the factor?” I ask Lucy. “You’re the epidemiologist.”
“I know, I know. It’s under our noses. We’re looking right at it and can’t see it.”
“Look harder.”
“Look at that.” She points to Baton Rouge. “It’s a starry yin embracing a clear yang. It’s telling us. It’s practically shouting.”
“You listen.” I get up. The toddies and the time have caught up with me.
“You okay?” she asks, pulling me down, staring into one eye, then the other.
“I’m tired. Let’s sleep on it.”
“Don’t leave.” She takes my arm.
“I’m not going anywhere. See you in the morning. We’ll talk about this stuff. Interesting.”
“One thing,” she says. We’re standing in the dim hall.
“Yes?”
“I want you to take these.” She puts something in my hand. Two capsules.
“What are these?”
“Alanone.”
“Why should I take them?”
“Tom,” she says. “Do you trust me?”
“Sure.” I try to see her face, but the dim light of the chandelier is behind her.
“Would you trust me now and take those without asking whys and wherefores?”
“No.”
“Oh dear.” She sighs. “I didn’t think you would.”
“I think you’d better tell what this is about.”
“Oh my. Very well. I guess I have to.” She was touching me but now she’s moved away a little. Her face, in the light now, is tender and grave.
Another déjà vu. The tragic tingle of bad news, the sweet sorrow to come. Her hand is on my arm. It is like the touch of a friend at a funeral.
“It’s this.” It must have been in her pocket. She hands it to me, a slip of paper. Her eyes are in shadow. “You’ll hate my guts but I had no choice.”
“What’s this?”
I hold it up to the slit of light from her office. “A lab slip?”
She’s silent.
I read aloud. “A Schoen-Beck test? On who?”
She’s silent.
“On Ely Culbertson? Come on. What’s this? A joke?”
“Schoen-Beck is for Herpes IV antibodies.” She could be talking to the lab. “That’s the new one. Genito-urinary and neural.”
“I know, I know. So what?”
“The name is Ellie Culbertson, Tom.”
“He’s dead.’
“Ellie, Tom. Not Ely.”
“I see. So what?”
“That’s what Van Dorn calls Ellen, isn’t it, as a compliment to her bridge playing. You’ve told me yourself. She’s his Ellie Culbertson.”
“Yes, but—”
“Dear,” she says, taking my arm. “People don’t use their real names for this test.”
“True, but you still don’t know who this is.”
“Honey, George Cutrer told me.” Her voice is sorrowful.
“Who in the fuck is he to know?”
“Honey, he’s chief of ob-gyn. And he has to tell me. I’m the epidemiologist, remember?”
“Who else did he tell?”
“No one. I swear.”
“Let’s see the date. Where’s the date?” I can’t seem to read the date.
She’s beside me, reading past my shoulder in the slit of light.
“The date was six weeks ago.”
“How do you know it wasn’t me?”
She has another slip. She’s the good intern. “Here. Six months ago she was negative. Six months ago you were in prison in Alabama. Six weeks ago she’s positive. Six weeks ago you were still in prison in Alabama. Now, unless they allow conjugal visits in federal prisons—”
“That was uncalled for.”
“You’re right. Jesus, I’m sorry.”
“Good night.”
She plucks my sleeve.
“Do you hold it against me?”
“No.” I don’t.
“I feel rotten. But you see that I had to tell you. I’m sorry. I know you feel rotten too.”
“I don’t.” I don’t. I don’t feel anything. “Good night.”
“If there is anything at all you need. Anything.”
“Thanks. I think I’ll have a drink and go to bed.”
“I’ll get you one. You go on upstairs. I’ll bring you one.”
I remember where it’s always been kept. In the sideboard in the dining room.
“Thanks.”
She folds my hand on the capsules. “I’ll get you a drink to chase them.”
I don’t move.
“Tom—”
“Yes?”
“You see, I had no way of knowing whether you and Ellen— that is, since you got back — and I don’t intend to ask.”
“Good.”
“I think I’ll go on up. You remember where—”
“Yes, in the sideboard. I remember.”
“One more thing, Tom.” She’s half turned away.
“Yes?”
“I’ve taken two too.”
“Two too,” I repeat.
“There’s nothing wrong with me, Tom. Do you understand?”
“Yes,” I say, not understanding.
“Are you all right?”
“I’m fine.”
“So I’ll say good night.”
“All right.”
She gives me a kiss on the mouth, eyes open, searching mine.
3. I HAVE A FEW drinks standing at the sideboard in the dim dark of the dining room. There is a single gleam from the hall chandelier on the polished table. It’s been twenty years since I stood here. Yet I remember exactly where the decanter is, an expensive silver-and-crystal affair, and the child’s silver cup Uncle Rylan used for a jigger, and that he filled it, the decanter, with a cheap bourbon named Two Natural. It’s the same bourbon and twenty years haven’t helped it. Several times I fill the cup, keeping a thumb at the rim to feel the cup fill. I stand in the dark.
Uncle Rylan would stand at the sideboard making a toddy for Miss Bett, first stirring sugar into three fingers of water. The silver spoon made a tinkling sound against the crystal. The stirring went on much longer than was required to dissolve the sugar. There was always talk of politics during the stirring.
Even here with the freshly polished furniture there is the old smell of the house, of scoured wood and bird dogs.
It is not bad standing in the dark drinking.