"Not at all the same thing. You're viewing me right now. You can't touch me, can you, or smell me, or anything like that. You could if you were seeing me. Right now, I'm two hundred miles away from you at least. So how can it be the same thing?"
Baley grew interested. "But I see you with my eyes."
"No, you don't see me. You see my image. You're viewing me."
"And that makes a difference?"
"All the difference there is."
"I see." In a way he did. The distinction was not one he could make easily, but it had a kind of logic to it.
She said, bending her head a little to one side, "Do you really see?"
"Yes."
"Does that mean you wouldn't mind if I took off my wrapper?" She was smiling.
He thought: She's teasing and I ought to take her up on it. But aloud he said, "No, it would take my mind off my job. We'll discuss it another time."
"Do you mind my being in the wrapper, rather than something more formal? Seriously."
"I don't mind."
"May I call you by your first name?"
"If you have the occasion."
"What is your first name?"
"Elijah."
"All right." She snuggled into a chair that looked hard and almost ceramic in texture, but it slowly gave as she sat until it embraced her gently.
Baley said, "To business, now."
She said, "To business."
Baley found it all extraordinarily difficult. There was no way even to make a beginning. On Earth he would ask name, rating, City and Sector of dwelling, a million different routine questions. He might even know the answers to begin with, yet it would be a device to ease into the serious phase. It would serve to introduce him to the person, make his judgment of the tactics to pursue something other than a mere guess.
But here? How could he be certain of anything? The very verb "to see" meant different things to himself and to the woman. How many other words would be different? How often would they be at cross-purposes without his being aware of it?
He said, "How long were you married, Gladia?"
"Ten years, Elijah."
"How old are you?"
"Thirty-three."
Baley felt obscurely pleased. She might easily have been a hundred thirty-three.
He said, "Were you happily married?"
Gladia looked uneasy. "How do you mean that?"
"Well - " For a moment Baley was at a loss. How do you define a happy marriage. For that matter, what would a Solarian consider a happy marriage? He said, "Well, you saw one another often?"
"What? I should hope not. We're not animals, you know."
Baley winced. "You did live in the same mansion? I thought - "
"Of course, we did. We were married. But I had my quarters and he had his. He had a very important career which took much of his time and I have my own work. We viewed each other whenever necessary."
He saw you, didn't he?
"It's not a thing one talks about but he did see me."
"Do you have any children?"
Gladia jumped to her feet in obvious agitation. "That's too much. Of all the indecent - "
"Now wait. Wait!" Baley brought his fist down on the arm of his chair. "Don't be difficult. This is a murder investigation. Do you understand? Murder. And it was your husband who was murdered. Do you want to see the murderer found and punished or don't you?"
"Then ask about the murder, not about - about - "
"I have to ask all sorts of things. For one thing I want to know
whether you're sorry your husband is dead." He added with calculated brutality, "You don't seem to be."
She stared at him haughtily. "I'm sorry when anyone dies, especially when he's young and useful."
"Doesn't the fact that he was your husband make it just a little more than that?"
"He was assigned to me and, well, we did see each other when scheduled and - and" - she hurried the next words - "and, if you must know, we don't have children because none have been assigned us yet. I don't see what all that has to do with being sorry over someone being dead."
Maybe it had nothing to do with it, Baley thought. It depended on the social facts of life and with those he was not acquainted.
He changed the subject. "I'm told you have personal knowledge of the circumstances of the murder."
For a moment she seemed to grow taut. "I - discovered the body. Is that the way I should say it?"
"Then you didn't witness the actual murder?"
"Oh no," she said faintly.
"Well, suppose you tell me what happened. Take your time and use your own words." He sat back and composed himself to listen.
She began, "It was on three-two of the fifth - "
"When was that in Standard Time?" asked Baley quickly.
"I'm not sure. I really don't know. You can check, I suppose."
Her voice seemed shaky and her eyes had grown large. They were a little too gray to be called blue, he noted.
She said, "He came to my quarters. It was our assigned day for seeing and I knew he'd come."
"He always came on the assigned day?"
"Oh yes. He was a very conscientious man, a good Solarian. He never skipped an assigned day and always came at the same time. Of course, he didn't stay long. We have not been assigned ch - "
She couldn't finish the word, but Baley nodded.
"Anyway," she said, "he always came at the same time, you know, so that everything would be comfortable. We spoke a few minutes; seeing is an ordeal, but he always spoke quite normally to me. It was his way. Then he left to attend to some project he was involved with; I'm not sure what. He had a special laboratory in my quarters