refrigerated in a cup of sherry for an hour, we moved across the hall and Fritz brought coffee. I opened the box, but he merely gave it a brief glance and sat, and I went to my desk, swung my chair around, and got my notebook from a pocket.
“I was there nearly three hours,” I said. “Do you want the crop?”
“No.” He was pouring coffee. “Only what may be useful.”
“Then you should be back at your book in about ten minutes. To simplify it I’ll make it Elinor and Amy. The most interesting item is the fact that Elinor had no photographs anywhere, not even at the bottom of a drawer. Not one. That’s extremely significant, so please tell me what it signifies.”
He made a noise, not enough of one to be called a grunt. “Did you get nothing at all?” He sipped coffee.
“Close to it. The trouble is, Amy doesn’t know anything. I doubt if there’s another girl anywhere who had a mother for twenty-two years and knows so little about her. One thing she knows, or thinks she does, is that her mother
hated her and tried hard to hide it. She says that Amy means ‘beloved,’ and that Elinor probably wasn’t aware that she was being sarcastic when she named her that.”
I went to the pot of coffee on Wolfe’s desk, poured a full cup, returned to my chair, and took a couple of sips. “Did Elinor have any close friends, men or women'Amy doesn’t know. Of course she has been away at college for most of the last four years. What was Elinor’s basic character'Careful, correct, and cold about covers it, according to Amy. One of the words she used was ‘introvert,’ which I would have supposed was moth-eaten for a girl just out of Smith.”
I nipped a page of my notebook. “Elinor must have dropped some hints without thinking, at least one little one in twenty years, about her background, her childhood, but Amy says no. She doesn’t know what Elinor did for a living before she went to work for Raymond Thome Productions, the firm she was with when she died. She doesn’t even know what Elinor did, specifically, at Thome’s; she only knows it must have been an important job.”
I nipped another page and took some coffee. “Believe it or not, Amy doesn’t know where she was born. She thinks it might have been Mount Sinai Hospital, because that’s where Elinor went for an appendectomy about ten years ago, but that’s just a guess. Anyway it probably wouldn’t help much, since Elinor certainly wasn’t letting things she didn’t want known get into the record. Amy does know one thing, and of course it’s essential, the date. She was bom April twelfth, nineteen forty-five. About five years ago she decided to see the doctor who signed her birth certificate but found he was dead. So she was conceived around the middle of July nineteen forty-four, so that’s the time to place Elinor, but Amy doesn’t know where she was living. The first home Amy remembers was a walkup, two flights, on West Ninety-second Street, when she was three. When she was seven they moved to a better one on West Seventy-eighth Street, and when she was thirteen they jumped the park to the East Side, to the one I inspected this morning.”
I emptied my cup and decided it was enough. “I’ll skip the details of the inspection unless you insist. As I said,
no photographs, which is fantastic. The letters and other papers, a washout. If we fed them to a computer I would expect it to come up with something like so what or tell it to the marines. It would have been a pleasure to find for instance a newspaper clipping about a man, no matter what it said, but nothing doing. Did I mention that Amy has no photograph of her mother'We’ll have to snare one somehow.” I shut the notebook and tossed it on the desk. “Questions?”
He said, “Grrrhh.”
“I agree. Oh, you asked me last evening if Amy is interested not so much in genes but in gold. Does she think that a father who could be so free with bank checks must have a barrel of it and