
The crisp, bright host led them to a table by a window. Matt stayed way back, damp and sagging in a suit which had already seen a full day’s work. Fog drifted past, outside the window. He was glad that it was outside and he, at last, was inside. Warm and damp was better than cold and damp.
His personal humidity was a result not of the fog but of the speed with which Ada Silberwetter sent her little purple, bullet flying through it. The last time Matt had driven over thirty was the time the billboard truck rearended him and his car skidded half a block. And that had been by daylight.
The flight through the fog, which he had spent, cramped and sweating, in a back seat suitabke for nothing larger than a spare pair of shoes, was bad enough, even leaving out the blackmail that had brought him. On arrival, he was further enraged by the “little spot” Ada had decided was the proper setting for a murder investigation. A step or two down from a crystal-and-headwaiter type of place, it was nonetheless about nine steps too high for Matt, who was more used to establishments with a toothpick dispenser by the cash register and a dark spot in the entryway to show where the cigarette machine used to be.
On arrival, as token male in the trio, he had summoned the courage to face the sparkling host behind the lectern and murmur a desire for a table, preferably with chairs. Luck smiled upon him, and he returned to the ladies with relief rolling through his muscles. “He says it should be ninety minutes, at least, before there’s a space. We could try….”
Ada, patting his hand on the way had ambled over for a private chat with the gold-suited master of the house. Ninety minutes became three. The host apologized for making them wait THAT long.
“My, this place seems to be popular,” Mrs. Benz remarked, as the host evaporated. “However did we get a table?”
Ada was checking her stockings to make sure she hadn’t damaged them while switching out of her Santa ensemble in the car. “Hmmm? I just mentioned the name of one of Marshall’s friends.”
Mrs. Benz nodded, and turned to look over the artwork stretching above her on the wall. Matt ran his tongue over his remaining wisdom teeth. “Marshall’s name wouldn’t have done it?”
A warm smile turned full radiance on him. “No.”
Matt, though he fought the impulse, leaned a little forward. “But his friend’s name did.”
The smile barely moved, but dimples at each side deepened. “Yes.”
Matt sat back and said no more. He had decided he didn’t really want to know.
“It’s warm in here,” said Mrs. Benz, turning to the younger woman. “It’s cold enough outside. Don’t you go south for the winter, or have you gone and come back already?”
Matt actually felt the smile move from him to his mother. “Oh, some years we’re snowbirds,” Ada told her. “But it’s one of those things about working for the City: you can’t always leave town when you want to. Besides, I love snow, and Christmas, and Marshall humors me.”
“Poor old toad.” Mts. Benz nodded. “Mine was just the same. It’s a good thing they don’t know what they’re getting into when they get married.
“Oh, but Marshall did,” Ada assured her, smoothing a nonexistent wrinkle in the silken blouse. “They’d had my current husband’s phone tapped for months, and after Marshall listened to the tapes, he came and told me Rodney might be on the skids and it might be a good idea for me to take up a similar position with a different concern. So I was able to leave before Rodney was indicted, and avoid the rush.”
Matt glanced at his mother, expecting shock and disapproval, or at least surprise. But Mrs. Benz nodded fierce assent. “Now, that’s what I don’t like about government work. I keep telling Matt he should have taken that job at the bar.”
It was Ada who raised one eyebrow in surprise. “I never wanted to work for the city, myself. I wanted to grow up to be a centerfold in Playboy. They seemed to wear such nice clothes and visit such interesting places.”
A deep smile spread across Mrs. Benz’s features. “We didn’t have Playboy in my day. We had all the Hollywood fan magazines, though. I was going to be a tap dancer and dance on a battleship with all the sailors, the way it happened in the movies.”
“Oh, I had taps, too!” Ada’s voice vibrated with the joyful recognition of one who has just found somebody who could play the other half of “Heart and Soul”. “That’s how I got my first job. Was six; they needed a whole herd of kids who could dance around a big cardboard candy bar in a commercial. We had to go round it twice and, on cue, lean way over and go into raptures. Sixteen kids, no air conditioning, and thirty-five retakes. For that we got four candy bars apiece. That’s when I learned how artists are exploited.”
She paused as the appreciative author chortled and then added, thoughtfully: “That’s when I learned to fake orgasm, too: it was a crummy candy bar.”
Mrs. Benz laughed, but Ada’s eyes were fixed on Matt. He hoped the candlelight was too dim for people at the nearest tables to see he was blushing. He knew Mrs. Silberwetter could tell, of course.
He was saved from further conversation along those lines by the arrival of a pal, frightened waitress. “Hi!” she said almost in a whisper, and blinked at them. “Is everything all right?”
Like the other visible staff, she was clad in cloth of antique gold, with a matching choker of large gold beads. Her neckline was cut in a rectangle, wider than it was deep, to present a pair of soft white shoulders. The gown was not otherwise revealing, but it was not remarkably tight, either, as Matt observed when she leaned over the table to adjust unnecessarily the little golden candle on the table. She was angled so Matt could see as far as he wanted, and then some.
Passing around the menus, she leaned for display a second time. Perhaps, Matt thought, she had orders, for the better entertainment of whoever Ada Silberwetter had claimed he was. He filed the thought away in his writing file. Rather startlingly large breasts, not offensively firm, combined with the charm of the choker and quaintly cut dress and, above all, her appealing silence, to make of her a magical creature, an otherworldly and unhappy servant of an eldritch power. Just right for a spot in the novel, despite the fact that from her utterly formless chin upward, she was one of the most pallid and uninterestingly homely creatures he had ever beheld.
He opened the gold-bound food list and frowned, not at the prices. How was it he could peer down a woman’s dress and rakes notes for a book but start blushing the moment he looked at another woman’s face? He peeked over the top of the menu. Never, he thought, had he glanced at somebody and been so aware of the location of her tongue.
Ada happened to raise her eyes at the same moment, and discovered his eyes. The tongue came out and slipped gently along her upper lip.
“Matt?” His mother had her nose virtually against the price list, trying to read the elegant lettering. “Matt, do you see anything?”
“Um,” he replied, hiding his face behind his own menu again.



































