Daniel's car was parked at the curb out in front of my apartment. I peered in, half expecting to find him asleep on the back seat. I went in through the gate and around the side of the building to Henry's backyard. Daniel was sitting on the cinder-block wall that separated Henry's lot from our neighbor to the right. Daniel, his elbows on his knees, was blowing a low, mournful tune on an alto har-monica. With the cowboy boots, the jeans, and a blue-denim jacket, he might have been out on the range.
" 'Bout time you got home," he remarked. He tucked the harmonica in his pocket and got up.
"I had work to do."
"You're always working. You should take better care of yourself."
I unlocked my front door and went in, flipping on the light. I slung my handbag on a chair and sank down on the couch. Daniel moved into my kitchenette and opened the refrigerator.
"Don't you ever grocery-shop?"
"What for? I'm never home."
"Lord." He took out a stub of butter, some eggs, and a packet of cheese so old it looked like dark plastic around the edge. While I watched, he searched my kitchen cabi-nets, assembling miscellaneous foodstuffs. I slouched down on my spine, leaning my head against the back of the couch with my feet propped up on the ottoman. I was fresh out of snappy talk and I couldn't conjure up a shred of anger. This was a man I'd loved once, and though the feelings were gone, a certain familiarity remained.
"How come this place smells like feet?" he said idly. He was already chopping onions, his fingers nimble. He played piano the same way, with a careless expertise.
"It's my air fern. Somebody gave it to me as a pet."
He picked up the tag end of a pound of bacon, sniffing suspiciously at the contents. "Stiff as beef jerky."
"Lasts longer that way," I said.
He shrugged and extracted the three remaining pieces of bacon, which he dropped into the skillet with a clinking sound. "God, one thing about giving up dope, food never has tasted right," he said. "Smoke dope, you're always eating the best meal you ever had. Helps when you're broke or on the road."
"You really gave up the hard stuff?"
"'Fraid so," he said. "Gave up cigarettes, gave up coffee. I do drink a beer now and then, though I notice you don't have any. I used to go to AA meetings five times a week, but that talk of a higher power got to me in the end. There isn't any power higher than heroin, you can take my word for it."
I could feel myself drifting off. He was humming to himself, a melody dimly remembered, that blended with the scent of bacon and eggs. What could smell better than supper being cooked by someone else?
He shook me gently and I woke to find an omelet on a warmed plate being placed in my lap. I roused myself, suddenly famished again.
Daniel sat cross-legged on the floor, forking up eggs while he talked. "Who lives in the house?"
"My landlord, Henry Pitts. He's off in Michigan."
"You got something goin' with him?"
I paused between bites. "The man is eighty-one."
"He have a piano?"
"Actually, I think he does. An upright, probably out of tune. His wife used to play."
"I'd like to try it, if there's a way to get in. You think he'd care?"
"Not at all. I've got a key. You mean tonight?"
"Tomorrow. I gotta be somewhere in a bit."
The way the light fell on his face, I could see the lines near his eyes. Daniel had lived hard and he wasn't aging well. He looked haggard, a gauntness beginning to emerge. "I can't believe you're a private detective," he said. "Seems weird to me."
"It's not that different from being a cop," I said. "I'm not part of the bureaucracy, that's all. Don't wear a uni-form or punch a time clock. I get paid more, but not as regularly."
"A bit more dangerous, isn't it? I don't remember anyone ever tried to blow you up back then."
"Well, they sure tried everything else. Traffic detail, every time you pull someone over, you wonder if the car's stolen, if the driver's got a gun. Domestic violence is worse. People drinking, doing drugs. Half the time they'd just as soon waste you as one another. Knock on the door, you never know what you're dealing with."
"How'd you get involved in a homicide?"
"It didn't start out like that. You know the family, by the way," I said. -
"I do?"
"The Woods. Remember Bass Wood?"