"Well. When Whitman published the first edition of
"And…"
"A handful did in fact get rich. Almost everybody else worked twelve-hour shifts in factories, six days a week. It was the end of the agrarian world and the beginning of the mechanized one. Do you know that universal
"Everybody worked for the company, in a manner of speaking."
"You could say that. But, really, it's impossible to pin a poet like Whitman down this way. Was he writing about industrialization? Yes, he was. Was he writing about family? Certainly. And he was also writing about logging and sex and the westward expansion. You can go at him from just about any angle and find something that seems to support some thesis or other."
"I see."
" 'Of Life immense in passion, pulse, and power, cheerful, for freest action form'd under the laws divine, The Modern Man I sing.' I'm afraid that if you insist on too much focus here or there, you miss the larger point."
Cat said," 'To die is different from what any one supposes, and luckier.'"
"You know your Whitman, then."
"Just a line or two. I shouldn't take up any more of your time."
"I don't think I've been very helpful."
She rose graciously, a compassionate duchess who'd reached the limits of her ability to intercede in the coarser mysteries of the world, its infestations and calamitous weather. There were afflictions that were probably best addressed by local methods by chants and ritual burnings, the drawing of pentagrams.
"May I ask you one more question?" Cat said. "It's not related to Whitman."
"By all means."
"Is this where that fire was, the one that killed all those women? Was it this building?"
"No, actually, that building is around the corner. It's part of the biochemistry department now."
Cat rose and went to the window. It was all calmness below. It was students hurrying to class and, at the end of the block, the leaf-shimmer of Washington Square Park.
She called Pete on her cell when she got to the street.
"Ashberry."
"I just talked to the Whitman person."
"She tell you anything?"
"It seems you could interpret him as some sort of voice for the status quo. As in, if you worked at some awful job in a factory, twelve hours a day, six days a week, here was Whitman to tell you that your life was great, your life was poetry, you were a king in your own world."
"You think the kid thinks that?"
"I think
"You on your way back in?" "I am." "See you."
Pete was waiting in her cubicle when she arrived. He didn't ask about Whitman. He said, "Dick Harte's wife just gave us a little something."
"What?"
"He woke up in the middle of the night, the night before he was killed. Said he heard a noise."
"A noise?"
"One of those middle-of-the-night things."
"He was scared?"
"She didn't say scared. She said he said he heard a noise. She said he said he was going to go see what it was."
"Yeah. But she takes a little something to help her sleep. She doesn't rouse easily, it seems."
"And?"
"And he got up, left the bedroom. Was gone maybe ten minutes. Came back, said it was nothing, the two of them went back to sleep."
"That's it?"
"That's it," Pete said.
"You think it means anything?"
"Probably not. What do you think?"
"Hard to say. Probably not."
"At least she's talking now."
"The daughter?"
"Still in the ozone. Seriously unhinged."
"What's up with the son?"
"Mondo cooperative. Scary cooperative. Boy detective seems to like his sudden fame."
"As people do."
"He's a piece of work, as it turns out. Serious drug history, lately turned to Jesus. That school in Vermont's a jail, basically, for rich kids."
"Interesting."
"Semi-interesting. You don't think the son's involved, do you?"
"No. I don't."
"We're not going to get anything from the family, I don't think. I mean, I don't think there's anything to get."
"Probably right," she said.