I said I had a few questions about what had happened upstairs.
She said, "You're a cop?" and her face relaxed for a moment, then tightened. "You're not a cop," she said, with such certainty she had me convinced.
"I used to be," I said.
She nodded. "That I can believe. You look like you used to be, but not like you are now. I used to be a teenager. I used to be skinny. What do you want from me, Mr. Used to Be? I wasn't here, I don't know anything, and I already told the whole megillah twenty times."
"Not twenty times," I said.
"So maybe it was nineteen. What can you ask me that nobody asked me already?"
Nothing, as it turned out. I asked and she replied, and I can't say that either of us was enriched by the experience. After a few minutes of this she said, "My turn. Where did you come from?"
"Where did I come from?"
"You don't live in the building, so you came from someplace. I don't mean where were you born, I mean today. Where did you come from?"
"Fifty-seventh Street," I said.
"East? West? Where on Fifty-seventh Street?"
"Fifty-seventh and Ninth."
"What did you take, a cab? The bus?"
"I walked."
"You walked all the way from Fifty-seventh Street and Ninth Avenue to ask me these questions?"
"It's not that far."
"It's not next door. And you didn't call first. What if I didn't come in today? What if I got a headache and went home early?"
"Then I'd have missed this wonderful conversation."
She grinned, but she was not to be sidetracked. "You didn't come all this way," she said, "just to waste your time talking to me."
"Maybe I'm not the only one here who used to be a cop."
"I raised four boys. They wouldn't dare lie to me, but sometimes they would leave something out." She glanced toward the ceiling. "You talk to her yet?"
"No."
"And the longer you spend talking to me, the longer it is before you have to go talk to her."
"Your sons didn't get away with much, did they?"
"They turned out okay. I'd tell you all about them, but you already wasted enough time on me. Go see if she'll talk to you."
"She's living here now?"
"It's her home. Where else is she going to live?"
"After what happened- "
"Listen to me," she said. "One day my husband gives me a look. 'I got heartburn,' he said, 'and I bet anything you forgot to buy Gelusil.' And I stalked out of the room, very proud of myself, and I came back with a brand-new box of Gelusil in my hand, the economy size, and he was dead. It wasn't heartburn for a change, it was a massive coronary, and his last words to me were he bet I forgot to buy Gelusil."
"I'm sorry to hear that," I said.
"What sorry? You never knew him, you don't even know me. There's a point to this, Mr. Used to Be, and that's that I still live to this day in that apartment. I still have the chair he was in when he dropped dead. What am I going to do, move? Get rid of a perfectly good chair? What do you expect her to do, move out? Sell the house? And look around for a building that nobody ever died in?"
And was she home now?
"You think I keep tabs on her? You want to find out, go ring her bell. You weren't so shy about ringing mine."
Kristin Hollander didn't look as though she'd stepped out of a Kean painting, but then I hadn't expected her to. I'd seen her face in the papers and on television. She was tall, her figure athletic, her dark hair becomingly short. Her blue eyes weren't enormous, but they were large enough, and frank in their appraisal.
I hadn't been able to see them when she took her first look at me, through the peephole in the front door. I'd stood there while she looked me over, then showed her a business card, a driver's license, and a courtesy card from the Detectives' Endowment Association, the last a gift from Joe Durkin. It didn't mean anything, but civilians tend to find it impressive, or at least reassuring. It reassured Kristin enough to open the door.
She led me down a hallway past a darkened room. "The living room," she said, not glancing in that direction. "I don't go there. I'm not ready yet."
There were lights on in the tiled kitchen, where a radio played softly, tuned to an easy-listening station. Two red-painted ladderback chairs with caned seats were drawn up on either side of a pine table. One of them had a Snoopy mug in front of it, half full of coffee, along with a book that had been turned facedown to keep her place. She pointed to the other chair and I took it.
"I hope you don't need milk in your coffee," she said. "I'm afraid there isn't any." I said black was fine, and she brought it to me in another Snoopy mug, this one with a beagle stretched out on top of his doghouse. On her mug he was standing beside his food dish, his ears perked up.
She topped up her own coffee, sat down, marked her place in the book, and closed it and set it aside. "It's a novel," she said, "set in the fourteenth century. I have no idea how historically accurate it is. And what difference does it make? It's not as though I'm likely to remember what I read. Is your coffee all right?"
"It's fine."
"I didn't ask you if you wanted sugar."
"I never use it."
"Or artificial sweetener?"
"No, thanks."
"Well," she said expectantly. "Now what happens?"
"I guess I offer an explanation for coming here and ringing your doorbell."