7.

“Joe? Are you still awake?” It was a whisper.

“Who is this?” I said.

The voice on the other end got tight and a touch louder. “Who is this?”

It was Mary. How could I talk to Mary now? “Joe just went out to the bathroom, and then I’m going to get him in bed, I promise,” I said, it just coming out natural like that.

“Mr. Rosenkrantz?”

“I got to thinking I should give Joe a try anyway, and I’m glad I did, because we had a swell time. I’m just about leaving. Should I have Joe call you when he gets out of the bathroom?”

“No, no, it’s late,” she said. And lucky for me she did. What would I have done if she’d said yes? “I’m glad you’re there. I was really worried. He shouldn’t be alone.”

“He’s feeling better now.”

“Good. Very good. I’m so glad things worked out.” She did sound glad about it, relieved almost. “We still have our date for the morning though?”

“I wouldn’t miss it,” I said, and I was even grinning my patented grin, even if my throat was dry. You can hear someone smile over the telephone.

“Good night.”

“Good night,” I said and hung up.

Then I was alone with my son again. Alone with his corpse. I had killed my son. I didn’t mean it. Nobody could say I meant it. He had attacked me. The blood was trickling down my arm. My son was dead. I needed to go. I needed help. If I were writing a movie, what would I have the murderer do? I didn’t know. I never got the hang of those murder stories. That’s why nobody in Hollywood would hire me.

All this time I was trying to look everywhere but at his body, but then I saw him again, and the lump in my throat was a baseball that was choking me. Vee would know what to do. Vee was...

I needed a drink. I needed to get out of there. That was definitely what I needed to do. As soon as the thought occurred to me, I went into action. I went back through the swinging doors, through the dining room, grabbing my coat, over the chessboard floor and out into the night. I took the stairs two at a time.

The heat was oppressive. But I was nearly running, and I went like that the whole mile and a half or so back to George Village. The pain in my arm had dulled, maybe from the exertion, but I could see from the streetlights that it was still bleeding. I stopped to put on my coat. It was like a razor searing my arm as I slid the coat sleeve over the cut and twisted to get the other arm in. The renewed pain throbbed before settling back to a dull ache. Then, luck would have it, a car turned onto University from Caroline, heading towards me as I crossed University at St. Peter’s. The headlights resolved themselves, and I saw it was a cab. I flagged it down, and ran up to it even as it was coming to a stop in the southbound lane on St. Peter’s. The cabbie was a rare man—a driver who didn’t try to talk your ear off, so I didn’t have to try at small talk I was in no state to conduct. With no traffic, it took only ten minutes to get back to the hotel.

Then I was in the room. The window air conditioners had been on full blast, and the place felt like a refrigerator. It made the hairs on my arms stand up, and sent a shiver across my shoulders, which shot pain through my arm. I slipped out of my jacket, pulling the right sleeve off first and then gingerly sliding the coat off my left arm. The bleeding had stopped. My shirtsleeve was stuck to me with dried blood, and I pulled it free, a satisfying little tug, and tried to see the cut. It wasn’t anything serious, not much more than a scratch, and I guess that was something to be happy about. Yeah, thank God for the small things, never mind the—well, just never mind...

I checked my jacket. The blood hadn’t soaked through. I turned the sleeve inside out. There was a slight black smudge there, but that was all right. I righted the sleeve and tossed the jacket at the couch, missed, and left it there.

I kept standing there in the center of the living room with that whooshing hiss of the air conditioners deafening me as I tried to make sense of the suite. The maid had made up the bed and vacuumed the carpet and the place was so clean it was antiseptic, with that unreal sense of domesticity that hotels have, the furniture set up like someone were living here but without any of the telltale signs—a lamp off center on a side table, stubs and ashes in the ashtrays, a book laid out, hell, any books at all.

And, of course, Vee wasn’t there.

The sweat had dried on me, a salty skin that made me feel unclean. I started nodding my head, just nodding. At what I do not know, but nodding all the same. Joe was gone. I had killed him. I had killed a man. I was going to go to prison. Did they have the death penalty in Maryland? I couldn’t remember. I thought they did. I was going to go to the electric chair. Or maybe it was the gas chamber. And Joe was dead. I had killed him. I had killed a man? I was going to go to prison. And around and around like that for who knows how long, but you get the idea.

Then I thought I should really get some sleep. I had a meeting with Joe’s fiancée in the morning, and I was supposed to see the Montgomery kid too. I needed to be rested. And I know it was crazy to be thinking about things like I’d be able to keep my appointments, but you kill a man and tell me you don’t think crazy things. I started unbuttoning my shirt, but I hadn’t made it two buttons when the image of Joe lying there in the kitchen came back to me strong and I rushed for the bathroom, because this time I thought I would throw up again. But when I was on the floor in the bathroom with the cold porcelain in my hands, I only gave one belch that was half cough, and then just stayed there with my head hanging down near the toilet water and the cold of the tile floor bleeding in through my pants.

The cold woke me up again. I couldn’t go to prison. Who would look after Clotilde? I had been living in the YMCA so that the last of her movie money could go to keeping her in the hospital, but the money was running out, and I couldn’t let Clotilde go to a state hospital; they butchered the patients at those places, all of them walking around like empty spirits, drool hanging from their lips, a bunch of drug addicts and maniacs. That was why I was out here in the first place, grasping at straws, because while Vee had rescued me from the Y as a charity case, I needed to come up with Clotilde’s hospital money myself, and I couldn’t do it in prison. I had to do something. I had to—I didn’t know. I couldn’t think of anything, not one thing.

But Vee would probably know. Vee’s friend Carlton would definitely know. He was a gangster, wasn’t he?

I reached my hand into my pants pocket and clutched the hotel key with its plastic diamond tag that read “Suite 12-2.” They were sure to be able to help me. I didn’t need to go to prison. Nobody needed to know at all. It could have been an accident. It was an accident. I just needed somebody to show me how to...how to make it all okay.

I was up and moving then. I went out in the hallway, forgetting that I was wearing a torn and bloody shirt, that was how out of it I was, and I went to the stairwell because it was closer than the elevators, and so I had to climb I can’t tell you how many steps, but it was a lot of steps. The stairwell wasn’t air conditioned, of course, and the sweat was pouring off of me. I kept taking breaks at the landings, checking the cut to make sure it hadn’t started bleeding again. Finally at the twelfth floor, I pulled open the door. My heart was pounding, and I was out of breath, and I was overheated and dripping, and it all put me in more of a panic.

There were only four suites on the twelfth floor. These were the luxury suites. The grand suites. Vee had said that Carlton kept Suite 12-2 in perpetuity even though he had a house uptown and one on the Eastern Shore and spent maybe three weeks worth of nights at the hotel in a year, if that.

The door to Suite 12-2 was twenty feet from the stairwell with maybe another fifteen feet between the door and the elevators. It was very quiet. The eternally burning hall lights felt defiant so late at night, almost as though they were saying they didn’t need people, they could do fine on their own, thank you. See, I told you I was screwy.

I stood in front of the suite door. My heart was pounding, my arm was aching, I swallowed but my throat was dry. I raised my hand to knock, but managed nothing more than a tap, so of course there wasn’t any response. My nerves grew shakier. I couldn’t bring myself to knock again, and I couldn’t keep standing there in the hallway with a bloody shirt and a glistening brow. So I took the key, which was still in my hand, slid it into the lock, and opened the door.