"Making yourself at home?" came the voice behind me.
I started, making ever so slight a leap.
"I was admiring this enormous cat," I said casually.
"Sorry if I startled you. That's Lady Chatterley."
"What happened to her tail?"
"She's a Manx."
"She looks like a character," I said. Animal people seem to love it when you say things like this. Trasatti didn't seem to warm to it. He gestured me into the office, where he took a seat at his desk, pushing aside an irregular stack of hardback books.
"No secretary?" I asked.
"Business isn't big enough for clerical help. Anything I need done, I use the Mac upstairs. Go ahead and make a space for yourself," he said, indicating the only chair in the room.
"Thanks." I placed some books, a briefcase, and a pile of newspapers on the floor, and sat down.
"Now what can I help you with? I really can't add to what I've already given you in regard to Jack," he said.
"This was in regard to something else," I said while the fifteen-pound cat hopped onto my lap and settled between my knees. Up close, Lady Chatterley smelled like a pair of damp two-week-old socks. I scratched that little spot just above the base of its tail which made the back end of the cat rise up until its rosebud was staring me in the face. I pushed the back end down. I peppered my preface with lots of reassuring phrases "off the record," "just between us," and other felicitous expressions of confidentiality-before getting down to business. "I'm wondering what you can tell me about the Maddisons-Patty and her sister, Claire."
He seemed to take the question in stride. "What would you like to know?"
"Anything you care to tell," I said.
Paul straightened the stack of books in front of him, making sure all the edges were aligned and the top right-hand corners matched. "I didn't know the sister. She was older than we were. She was off at college by the time the family moved into the area and Patty started hanging out with Guy."
"The Maddisons were new in town?"
"Well no, not really. They'd been living out in Colgate and bought a house closer in. They never had the kind of money we did, the rest of us-not that we were wealthy," he added. "Bader Malek did well back in those days, but he wasn't what you'd call rich."
"Tell me about Patty."
"She was pretty. Dark." He put his hand at eye level, indicating bangs. "Hair down to here," he said. "She'd kind of peer out like this. She was strange, lots of phobias and nervous mannerisms. Bad posture, big tits. She chewed her nails to the quick and liked to stick herself with things." Trasatti put his hands in his lap, trying not to touch the items on his desk.
"She stuck herself? With what?"
"Needles. Pencils. Safety pins. I saw her burn herself one time. She put a lighted cigarette on her hand-casually, like it was happening to someone else. She never even flinched, but I could smell cooked flesh."
"Was Guy serious about her?" I pushed the cat's hind end down again and it began to work its claws into the knees of my jeans.
"She was serious about him. I have no idea what he thought of her."
"What about the others? Donovan and Bennet."
"What about them?"
"I just wondered what they were up to during this period."
"Donovan was working for his dad, as I remember. He was always working for his dad, so that's a safe bet. Jack was back at school by then, so he was only home on occasion. Christmas and spring break."
"And his mother's funeral," I said. I extracted the cat's claws from my knee and held its right paw between my fingers. I could feel its claws protrude and retract, but the cat seemed content, probably thinking about mice. "What about Bennet? Where was he?"
"Here in town. He and I were both finishing at UCST "
"Majoring in what?"
"My major was art history. His was economics or business, maybe public finance. He switched around some. I forget."
"Did it surprise you when Patty turned up pregnant?"
Trasatti snorted, shaking his head. "Patty would screw anyone. She was desperate for attention and we were happy to oblige."
"Really," I said. "Donovan never said she was promiscuous."
"She wasn't the only one. There was lots of screwing in those days. Free love, we called it. We were all smoking dope. Bunch of small-town hippies, or as close as we could get. We were always horny and hungry. Half the girls we hung out with were as fat as pigs. Except for Patty, of course, who was gorgeous, but whacked out."