"How she know he is in a state of near dissolution?" Hawk said.
"Wow," I said. "You talk like an Ivy Leaguer yourself."
"Ah's been practicin'," Hawk said. "How she know?"
"I assume he told her."
"So he either lying to her, or lying to you."
"And he hasn't got much reason to tell her he's going under if he's not," I said.
"'Less he looking for sympathy."
"He's got no reason to," I said. "He's two, three wives past her."
"So why he go tell her his troubles?"
"Well, she's a good one if you need some help."
"How long since he seen her?"
I shrugged. "Maybe twenty years. She was already divorced when I met her."
"And now he decides she's a good listener?"
"Umm," I said.
"'Tha's right," Hawk said.
We were quiet. Someone was playing The Platters on the jukebox. In the corner of the bar up high a hockey game played silently on television. The perfect compromise.
"Maybe knew about you," Hawk said.
"He wanted me he could walk into my office and tell me his problem," I said.
"And you'd do it free?"
I drank a little beer.
"You sound almost cynical," I said.
"Be the ghet-to experience," Hawk said, rolling the word ghetto into two long syllables. "Ah'm fighting to overcome it."
"So he knows about me and he needs help and he figures he can get it for nothing if he goes to Susan and cries dissolution."
"And it worked," Hawk said.
"If you're right," I said.
"Sure," Hawk said. "How you feel 'bout working for Susan's former husband?"
I shrugged. "Water over the dam," I said.
"Sure it is, and it really was the tooth fairy left all those quarters under your pillow."
"Got nothing to do with me," I said.
"That's true. But I know you, some of you, maybe not even Susan know. The hard part. Part makes you almost as good as me."
"Better," I said automatically.
"It ain't no water over no dam for that part," Hawk said.
I finished my beer. Jimmy brought me another pint. " 'Course it's not," I said.
Hawk smiled. "Umm," he said.
"You got that right," I said.
"So you going to help him?"
"I told Susan I would."
"You think this sexual harassment suit be the problem?"
"Be surprised," I said. "But it's a place to start."
"Should we have some more oysters?" Hawk said.
"We'd be fools not to," I said.
chapter four
MARCH WAS STILL chilly enough for a fire and I had one going in Susan's apartment when she came upstairs from her last appointment of the day. Pearl the Wonder Dog was lying on the rug in front of it, and I was on the couch with a bottle of my new favorite, Blue Moon Belgian White Ale, that Susan kept for me. It was not hard to locate. The only other thing in the refrigerator was a head of broccoli and two cans of Diet Coke.
Susan came in wearing her subdued professional wardrobe-dark suit, tailored blouse, understated makeup, little jewelry. When she was off duty she dressed far more flamboyantly. But she generated such intensity that dressing up or down made little difference.
Pearl got up at once, took a silk cushion from the wing chair, and carried it around wagging her tail. When Susan got that attended to, she got a bottle of Merlot out of the kitchen cabinet, poured half a glass, and brought it over to the couch. She plopped down beside me, put her feet up on the coffee table, leaned her head over, and kissed me lightly on the mouth.
"Some days are longer than others," she said.
Pearl eyed us speculatively, the pillow still in her mouth, and lay down by the fire and put her head on the pillow.
"Do you understand why she prances around with that pillow?" Susan said.
"No."
"Me either."
"Why was today so long?" I said.
Susan sighed and sipped her wine. It must have been a hell of a day, she took in nearly an ounce at one sip.
"One of the things a therapist runs into is the person who thinks now that they understand why they behave as they do, they are cured."
"And you think there may be another step?" I said.
"Changing the behavior would seem appropriate," Susan said.
"Appropriate," I said.
The logs settled a little in the fireplace. The front logs slid back in toward the back ones, making the fire more intense. I built a hell of a fire.
"The ability to understand doesn't automatically confer the ability to change."
"So people have another whole thing to go through," I said.
"Yep."
"And they don't like it."
"Nope," Susan said.
"And today you had several such people."
"Several."
We were quiet. She drank another swallow of wine and put her head against my shoulder.
"Been here long?" she said.
"No," I said. "I just got here. I had a couple beers with Hawk before I came."
"Pearl been fed?"
"Yep. Back yarded and fed."
"And a fire built," Susan said.
"I'd have started supper," I said, "but I didn't know whether you wanted your broccoli raw or simmered in Diet Coke."
"Umm," she said.
"Gee," I said, "Hawk often feels that way too."
We sat and looked into the fire and were quiet together. I liked it. It wasn't an absence of conversation; it was the presence of quiet.
"Saw your ex-husband this morning," I said.
Susan lifted her head from my shoulder and shifted slightly on the couch.
"Don't call him that," she said.
"Okay. I went to see the artist formerly known as Silverman today."
"And you don't have to be a smartass about it either," she said.
I nodded. This thing showed even more signs of not working out well for me.
"Shall I call him Brad?" I said.
"I really would rather not talk about him at all," Susan said.
"Even though you have employed me to save him."
"I didn't employ you," she said. "I asked for a favor."
It was something she did when she was angry, or frightened, which made her angry; she focused vigorously on the wrong part of the question.
"That's right," I said, "you did."
In front of the fire Pearl got up quite suddenly and turned around three times and lay back down, this time with her back to the fire and her feet stretched out toward us. I wasn't aware that Susan had moved, exactly, but she was no longer in contact with me, and her shoulders were angular again.
"Want some more wine?" I said.
"No thank you."
We sat silently again. The silence crackled. It wasn't quiet now; it was anger. I got up and walked to the kitchen and looked out of Susan's window at the darkness.
"Suze," I said, "what the hell is going on?"
"Am I required to tell you everything about everybody I've ever known?"
"I don't recall asking you to do that," I said.
"Well, don't keep bringing up my marriage."
"Suze, for crissake, you came to me."
"I asked for your help, I didn't ask for your approval," she said.