CHAPTER 14
The Bay Tower Room is not in a high crime neighborhood. It is thirty floors above the city and looks out through floor-to-ceiling glass past the Custom House Tower at Boston Harbor. There is a lot of polished brass and gleaming oak, and an orchestra with a swing era sound. Hawk and Laura were there already. My date was not. Probably still home primping, maybe getting advice from her mom on how far to go on the first date.
Hawk wore a white linen summer suit and a blue and white striped shirt and a white silk tie. A blue show handkerchief poked out of his breast pocket. Laura had creamy skin and red hair. She wore a green summer dress with small white figures in it.
Laura said, "Hello, Edmund." She always called me Edmund, just as she always called Hawk Othello. She probably had cats she called Damon and Pythias.
Hawk nodded at me. I sat down. Laura said, "Katie will be a little late."
I looked around at the room. "Elegant," I said. "Last blind date I had we took a six-pack to the drive-in."
"How are you feeling," Laura said.
"Fine," I said.
Laura put a hand on my arm. "Come on. It will not be good if you keep it all in."
Hawk grinned. "Laura been reading Dr. Brothers again," he said.
Laura ignored him. "How are you really, Edmund?"
I felt a little spurt of anger. "Suspended," I said. "As in suspended animation."
"I think you should talk about it. It will help you."
The waitress came and we ordered.
"I do talk about it," I said. "But not with everyone."
She looked a little startled.
"I talk with him about it." I gestured with my chin toward Hawk. Laura looked more startled. "And with a friend of mine named Paul Giacomin. What I could actually use is practice not talking about it."
"Othello talks?" she said.
"Hard to believe, isn't it?" I said.
"Oh," Laura said. "Here's Katie."
Hawk stood. So did I. Katie had skin the color of a gingersnap and black hair worn long and a big charming smile. She was wearing a rose-colored jumpsuit tight at the ankles. Laura introduced us.
Katie said she'd heard a lot about me. I said I hoped she didn't believe most of it. We ordered a round of drinks. Katie asked me what my sign was. Hawk made a funny noise, and put his hands over his mouth and coughed.
"Down the wrong tube," he said when he stopped coughing. His eyes were very bright.
"I don't really know my sign," I said.
"I'm a Virgo," she said.
I nodded.
The captain came and took our food orders. The band played "Moon River." Katie was a reporter for a UHF station in town. The food came. One of Spenser's laws of dining is that in high restaurants the food never lives up to the view. I tried my dinner. Right again.
"Have any of you been able to get a real handle on the punk rock phenomenon?" Katie said.
Hawk's face was as amiably expressionless as it always was. But his eyes seemed to gleam brighter and brighter. He had a bite of lamb. "Can't say's I have," he said.
Laura said, "Well, clearly it is a creature of the tension it creates between itself and the orthodox world."
I nodded.
The band played "Blue Velvet." We all danced.
"You are a big one, aren't you," Katie said.
"Yes."
We had dessert.
Laura said that she would love to interview Hawk and me together sometime. She had a theory about poetry and violence that she wanted to try out on us.
We had some brandy.
Hawk looked at his watch. "Time to go," he said. "I gotta bookie I gotta threaten early tomorrow."
We all smiled. And got up. And went.