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.Yet he had the sweetest smile, it was always a surprise, lighting up that pinched, sharp little face.It was one of his amusements to pretend that he was in love with Phoebe, and he would complain theatrically to anyone prepared to listen of her cruelty and hard-heartedness in refusing to entertain his advances.He was a crime reporter on the Evening Mail, though surely there were not enough crimes committed in this sleepy city to keep him as busy as he claimed to be.She told him about April and how long it was since she had heard from her.Only a week? Jimmy said.Shes probably gone off with some guy.She is slightly notorious, you know. Jimmy affected an accent from the movies; it had started as a joke at his own expenseJimmy Minor, ace reporter, at your service, lady! but it had become a habit and now he seemed not to notice how it grated on those around him who had to put up with it.If she was going somewhere, Phoebe said, she would have let me know, Im sure she would.The waitress came, and Jimmy ordered a glass of ginger beer and a beef sandwichPlenty of horse radish, baby, slather it on, I like it hot. He pronounced it hat.The girl tittered.When she had gone he whistled softly and said, Thats some wart.Wen, Phoebe said.What?Its a wen, not a wart.Jimmy had finished his cigarette, and now he lit a new one.No one smoked as much as Jimmy did; he had once told Phoebe that he often found himself wishing he could have a smoke while he was already smoking, and that indeed on more than one occasion he had caught himself lighting a cigarette even though the one he had going was there in the ashtray in front of him.He leaned back on the chair and crossed one of his sticklike little legs on the other and blew a bugle-shaped stream of smoke at the ceiling.So what do you think? he said.Phoebe was stirring a spoon round and round in the cold dregs in her cup.I think something has happened to her, she said quietly.He gave her a quick, sideways glance.Are you really worried? I mean, really?She shrugged, not wanting to seem melodramatic, not giving him cause to laugh at her.He was still watching her sidelong, frowning.At a party one night in her flat he had told her he thought her friendship with April Latimer was funny, and added, Funny peculiar, thats to say, not funny ha ha. He had been a little drunk and afterwards they had tacitly agreed to pretend to have forgotten this exchange, but the fact of what he had implied lingered between them uncomfortably.And laugh it off though she might, it had made Phoebe brood, and the memory of it still troubled her, a little.Youre probably right, of course, she said now.Probably its just April being April, skipping off and forgetting to tell anyone.But no, she did not believe it; she could not.What ever else April might be she was not thoughtless like that, not where her friends were concerned.The waitress came with Jimmys order.He bit a half-moon from his sandwich and, chewing, took a deep draw of his cigarette.What about the Prince of Bongo-Bongoland? he asked thickly.He swallowed hard, blinking from the effort.Have you made inquiries of His Majesty? He was smiling now but there was a glitter to his smile and the sharp tip of an eyetooth showed for a second at the side.He was jealous of Patrick Ojukwu; all the men in their circle were jealous of Patrick, nicknamed the Prince.She often wondered, in a troubled and troubling way, about Patrick and April had they, or had they not? It had all the makings of a juicy scandal, the wild white girl and the polished black man.More to the point, Phoebe said, what about Mrs.Latimer?Jimmy made a show of starting back as if in terror, throwing up a hand.Hold up! he cried.The blackamoor is one thing, but Morgan le Fay is another altogether. Aprils mother had a fearsome reputation among Aprils friends.I should telephone her, though.She must know where April is.Jimmy arched an eyebrow skeptically.You think so?He was right to doubt it, she knew; April had long ago stopped confiding in her mother; in fact, the two were barely on speaking terms.What about her brother, then? she said.Jimmy laughed at that.The Grand Gynie of Fitzwilliam Square, plumber to the quality, no pipe too small to probe?Dont be disgusting, Jimmy. She took a drink of her tea, but it was cold.Although I know April doesnt like him.Doesnt like? Try loathes.Then what should I do? she asked.He sipped his ginger beer and grimaced and said plaintively: Why you cant meet in a pub like any normal person, I dont know. He seemed already to have lost interest in the topic of Aprils whereabouts.They spoke desultorily of other things for a while, then he took up his cigarettes and matches and fished his raincoat from under his chair and said he had to go.Phoebe signaled to the waitress to bring the bill she knew she would have to pay, Jimmy was always broke and presently they were climbing to the street up the damp, slimed steps.At the top, Jimmy put a hand on her arm.Dont worry, he said.About April, I mean.Shell turn up.A faint, warmish smell of dung came to them from across the street, where by the railings of the Green there was a line of horse-drawn jaunting cars that offered tours of the city.In the fog they had a spectral air, the horses standing unnaturally still with heads lowered dejectedly and the caped and top-hatted drivers perched in attitudes of motionless expectancy on their high seats, as if awaiting imminent word to set off for the Borgo Pass or Dr.Jekylls rooms.You going back to work? Jimmy asked.He was glancing about with eyes narrowed; clearly in his mind he was already somewhere else.No, Phoebe said.Its my half-day off. She took a breath and felt the wet air swarm down coldly into her chest.Im going to see someone.My my father, actually.I suppose you wouldnt care to come along?He did not meet her eye and busied himself lighting another cigarette, turning aside and crouching over his cupped hands.Sorry, he said, straightening.Crimes to expose, stories to concoct, reputations to besmirch no rest for the busy newshound. He was a good half head shorter than she was; his plastic coat gave off a chemical odor.See you around, kid. He set off in the direction of Grafton Street but stopped and turned and came back again.By the way, he said, whats the difference between a wen and a wart?When he had gone she stood for a while irresolute, slowly pulling on her calfskin gloves.She had that heart-sinking feeling she had at this time every Thursday when the weekly visit to her father was in prospect.Today, however, there was an added sense of unease.She could not think why she had asked Jimmy to meet her what had she imagined he would say or do that would assuage her fears? There had been something odd in his manner, she had felt it the moment she mentioned Aprils long silence: an evasiveness, a shiftiness, almost.She was well aware of the simmering antipathy between her two so dissimilar friends.In some way Jimmy seemed jealous of April, as he was of Patrick Ojukwu.Or was it more resentment than jealousy? But if so, what was it in April that he found to resent? The Latimers of Dun Laoghaire were gentry, of course, but Jimmy would think she was, too, and he did not seem to hold it against her.She gazed across the street at the coaches and their intently biding jarveys
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