Fanny smiled. “We will, but I’m sure everything will be wonderful.”
When Mama was gone, he said, “I have to make a phone call.”
“Really? Your soup will get cold.”
“No,” he told her. “Not really. I’ll be right back.” He made handwashing gestures.
The restrooms were at the end of an alcove toward the rear, and there was a pay telephone between their doors. He went into the men’s, relieved himself, and rinsed and dried his fingers as well as he could. If Fanny had followed him, she would probably have returned to the table when she saw him go in. The coins in his pocket were mostly those of the real world, of his own world—fraudulent-looking quarters with nickel faces and copper rims, pennies of copper-coated zinc. But Capini’s itself was part of his real world too, and in it he should be able to telephone his apartment without difficulty and without getting Klamm or anyone else but Lara, if Lara were there.
One of Mama’s sons came in and stood at the urinal. “Ya gotta make a phone call? I can give ya change.”
“No, thanks,” he said. “I’ve got enough.”
On the other side of the door he put a quarter in the slot. The earpiece chimed once and reassured him with a dial tone. He wanted to push the buttons quickly; he made himself slow down so that he could be certain there had been no mistake.
He pressed the last digit, and the dial tone ceased. There was nothing, no sound at all. His quarter jingled into the coin return when he hung up. Reinserting it, he entered his number again.
Behind him, Mama’s son said, “Can’t get through, huh?”
He shook his head. “It doesn’t ring.”
“They shouldn’t have let those sons of bitches bust up the Bell System.” Mama’s son turned away.
“Wait a minute. Can you break a fifty for me?”
“No problem. Come up to the register.”
He followed Mama’s son to the desk, slipping a bill out of Sheng’s packet.
“Need singles?”
“No,” he said. For a moment he held his breath. “Just a couple fives.”
“Okay.” Mama’s son accepted the fifty, laid it on the cash register, and gave him two twenties and two fives; the twenties had Andrew Jackson’s picture, the fives had Lincoln’s. “Whatcha think about the fight?”
“What fight?” He had been studying the bills. Suddenly afraid he had studied them too long, he thrust them hurriedly into a pocket.
“What fight?” Mama’s son sounded aggrieved. “Joe’s gonna fight the champ. Don’tcha read the paper?”
“That’s right,” he said. “I did see that. Let’s hope Joe gives him a hell of a match.”
“Take it to the bank, pal. Joe’s a customer, ya know. He was in last night with his wife and some other mantrap. Big as a house, but he don’t throw his weight around. He’s as nice an’ polite as you or me.”
He said, “I’ll keep my fingers crossed,” and went back to the table, where he sat with his head in his hands. There was an empty bowl in front of him.
“Yours was getting cold,” Fanny said, “so I ate it.” There was a full bowl before her, still steaming. After a moment, she picked it up and offered it to him.
“That’s all right,” he said.
“I was just trying to make a joke. Take it, it’s yours anyway. What’s the matter?”
“How long have you been eating here?”
“What?”
“I asked how long you’ve been coming in here. When we were in your room you said there was a good Italian place a couple of blocks away—something like that. So you’ve eaten here before. When was the first time?”
Fanny counted on her fingers. “Four days ago. Tuesday.”
“And they took your money?”
“I didn’t pay.” She hesitated. “I was with a sergeant I know, a sergeant in uniform. We were hungry, so we decided to try it. He was going to buy, but one of the men who work here said it was okay, on the house. You know how they do for cops sometimes. Now if you want to stay at my place tonight, you’d better tell me what’s up.”
“We’re in my world—the place the Visitors come from. Or if we’re not, this whole place is a Visitor.”
She stared at him in disbelief.
“I’ve eaten here two or three times a week for the past few years. Tuesday night I brought Lara here. Some of her power or magic dust or whatever you want to call it rubbed off. Were you here for dinner? What time?”
Fanny nodded. “About eight.”
“That was when we were here. The store closes at six, and it takes me about an hour to get home on the bus. I came home, showered, and changed clothes. My apartment’s a block and a half that way.” He pointed. “I think if I leave here without you, I might be able to spend the night in my own bed. Maybe even if I leave with you.”
“Then you’ll have to put me up.”
“Sure.”
“Because I’m not leaving you. You’re bait for North, and getting him means a promotion, probably two grades—Detective Lieutenant Lindy. It might also mean the survival of the human race, although that’s strictly secondary.”
“All right,” he said.
“You’re willing to help me?”
“Yes, if you’re willing to help me. If I go home, that’s the life I had before I met Lara. She may visit my world, but this is where she comes from. This is where she lives, so this is where I’ll find her, if I find her at all.”
The waitress halted at their table. “Don’t care for your soup, ma’am?”
Fanny shook her head. “I let it get cold, but that’s all right. Take it away.”
When the waitress left, he said, “This is where I belong too, because Lara’s here.”
“Since you’re going to help me and we’re sharing info, the future detective lieutenant will share some of hers: your Lara is Laura Nomos.”
“I know.”
Fanny looked surprised. “I didn’t, not for sure. Or not till a minute ago, when you were up at the cash register. How could you be sure? And what were you doing there anyway?”
“I saw her in the theater, just like you did. And it was Lara—I told you about Mr. Kolecke. In your room you said she was Laura Nomos, so the names aren’t just a coincidence.”
“Well, I thought you were wrong, that Klamm’s stepdaughter couldn’t possibly be ducking in and out of the Visiting World as if she were the goddess. But like you say, I saw her. And that Italian woman said she saw your Lara last night, dressed the way Nomos was in the theater, so that was confirmation. You’re not crazy or nearsighted. Your Lara’s Laura Nomos.”
He nodded.
Fanny shuddered. “And if you’re not crazy, you might be right about this restaurant, and I ought to be scared to death. This is your world?”
“I think so. North calls it C-One.” He showed her the money and told her what had happened. “Do you have any large bills?”
“A twenty. That’s the biggest.”
“That should do,” he said. “I want you to take it to the register and ask for two tens. Take whatever he gives you and bring it back here.”
Home Again
The waitress had brought Fanny’s salad and his fettuccine, with the tea and coffee, while Fanny was at the register. When she returned she asked, “Aren’t you hungry?”
“I’m starved,” he said, “but first I want to see what you got.”
“Two perfectly ordinary ten-dollar bills.” She held them out. “You really are crazy, that’s what I think.”
He shook his head and forked up fettuccine.
“And I asked if you were hungry.”
“I want to think,” he told her, “and I think better when I’m eating.” After another bite he asked, “Would you like a taste? It’s really very good.”
“Just to keep you happy.” She took a forkful, followed by two more. “You didn’t really get those bills you showed me from him, did you?”
He nodded, his mouth full.
“You’re saying that man knows, that he’s manipulating us.”
He swallowed. “I don’t think so. He talked to me about the fight, Joe’s fight.”